Summary:
Fixes T9136.
- Fix a bug where the name is rendered improperly.
- Put disabled rules at the bottom.
- Always show the rule monogram so you can distingiush between rules with the same name.
Test Plan: {F6849915}
Maniphest Tasks: T9136
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20798
Summary:
Fixes T8952. These feed stories are not interesting and tend to be generated as collateral damage when a non-story update is made to an old task and someone has a "subscribe me" Herald rule.
Also clean up some of the Herald field/condition indexing behavior slightly.
Test Plan: Wrote a "Subscribe X" herald rule, made a trivial update to a task. Before: low-value feed story; after: no feed story.
Maniphest Tasks: T8952
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20797
Summary: Fixes T13409. This is a companion to the existing "Mark with flag" rule.
Test Plan: Used a "remove flag" rule on an object with no flag (not removed), the right type of flag (removed), and a different type of flag (not removed).
Maniphest Tasks: T13409
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20796
Summary:
Fixes T13408. Currently, when a package (or other object) appears in a field (rather than an action), it is not indexed.
Instead: index fields too, not just actions.
Test Plan:
- Wrote a rule like "[ Affected packages include ] ...".
- Updated the search index.
- Saw rule appear on "Affected By Herald Rules" on the package detail page.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13408
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20795
Summary: Fixes T13412. If you search for "https://phabricator.example.com" with no trailing slash, we currently redirect you to "", which is fouled by a safety check in the redirection flow.
Test Plan:
- Searched for "https://local.phacility.com"; before: fatal in redirection; after: clean redirect.
- Searched for other self-URIs, got normal redirects.
Maniphest Tasks: T13412
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20794
Summary: Fixes T13405. We currently offer non-global custom saved queries here, but this doesn't make sense as a global default setting.
Test Plan: Saved a global search query, edited global search settings, no longer saw the non-global query as an option.
Maniphest Tasks: T13405
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20793
Summary: Ref T13405. Some pages don't have a contextual application.
Test Plan: Viewed 404 page, no more fatal.
Maniphest Tasks: T13405
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20792
Summary:
Ref T13404. Except for one known issue in Multimeter, Phabricator appears to function properly in this mode. It is broadly desirable that we run in this mode; it's good on its own, and enabled by default in at least some recent MySQL.
Additionally, "ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY" and "STRICT_ALL_TABLES" shared a setup key, so ignoring one would ignore both. Change the key so that existing ignores on "ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY" do not mask "STRICT_ALL_TABLES" warnings.
Test Plan: Grepped for `ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY`.
Maniphest Tasks: T13404
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20791
Summary: Ref T13404. Enabling "STRICT_ALL_TABLES" is good, but if you don't want to bother it doesn't matter too much. All upstream development has been on "STRICT_ALL_TABLES" for a long time.
Test Plan: {F6847839}
Maniphest Tasks: T13404
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20790
Summary: Fixes T13406. On the logout screen, test for no configured providers and warn users they may be getting into more trouble than they expect.
Test Plan:
- Logged out of a normal install and a fresh (unconfigured) install.
{F6847659}
Maniphest Tasks: T13406
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20789
Summary:
See D20779, https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/3089. `bin/config set` complains about
missing config file as if it's un-writable.
Test Plan: run `bin/config set` with missing, writable, unwritable conf.json and parent dir.
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20788
Summary: Fixes T13405. The default behavior of the global search bar isn't currently configurable, but can be made configurable fairly easily.
Test Plan: Changed setting as an administrator, saw setting reflected as a user with no previous preference. As a user with an existing preference, saw preference retained.
Maniphest Tasks: T13405
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20787
Summary:
Fixes T13392. If you have 17 load balancers in sequence, Phabricator will receive requests with at least 17 "X-Forwarded-For" components in the header.
We want to select the 17th-from-last element, since prior elements are not trustworthy.
This currently isn't very easy/obvious, and you have to add a kind of sketchy piece of custom code to `preamble.php` to do any "X-Forwarded-For" parsing. Make handling this correctly easier.
Test Plan:
- Ran unit tests.
- Configured my local `preamble.php` to call `preamble_trust_x_forwarded_for_header(4)`, then made `/debug/` dump the header and the final value of `REMOTE_ADDR`.
```
$ curl http://local.phacility.com/debug/
<pre>
HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR =
FINAL REMOTE_ADDR = 127.0.0.1
</pre>
```
```
$ curl -H 'X-Forwarded-For: 1.1.1.1, 2.2.2.2, 3.3.3.3, 4.4.4.4, 5.5.5.5, 6.6.6.6' http://local.phacility.com/debug/
<pre>
HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR = 1.1.1.1, 2.2.2.2, 3.3.3.3, 4.4.4.4, 5.5.5.5, 6.6.6.6
FINAL REMOTE_ADDR = 3.3.3.3
</pre>
```
```
$ curl -H 'X-Forwarded-For: 5.5.5.5, 6.6.6.6' http://local.phacility.com/debug/
<pre>
HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR = 5.5.5.5, 6.6.6.6
FINAL REMOTE_ADDR = 5.5.5.5
</pre>
```
Maniphest Tasks: T13392
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20785
Summary:
Ref T13336. Currently, "bin/storage destroy" destroys every master. This is wonderfully destructive, but if replication fails it's useful to be able to destroy only a replica.
Operate on a single host, and require "--host" to target the operation in cluster mode, so `bin/storage destroy --host dbreplica001` is a useful operation.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/storage destroy` with various flags locally. Will destroy `secure002` and refresh replication.
Maniphest Tasks: T13336
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20784
Summary: Ref T13366. The "authorities" mechanism was replaced, but I missed this callsite. Update it to use the request cache mechanism.
Test Plan: As a user without permission to view some initiatives, viewed a list of initiatives.
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20783
Summary: Ref T13404. This query is invalid under "sql_mode=ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY". Rewrite it to avoid interacting with `actorIdentity` at all; this is a little more robust in the presence of weird data and not really more complicated.
Test Plan:
- Enabled "ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY".
- Hit system actions (e.g., login).
- Before: error.
- After: clean login.
- Tried to login with a bad password many times in a row, got properly limited by the system action rate limiter.
Maniphest Tasks: T13404
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20782
Summary:
Depends on D20780. Ref T13403. During initial setup, it's routine to run "bin/config" with a bad database config. We start the stack in "config optional" mode to anticipate this.
However, even in this mode, we may emit warnings if the connection fails in certain ways. These warnings aren't useful; suppress them with "@".
(Possibly this message should move from "phlog()" to "--trace" at some point, but it has a certain amount of context/history around it.)
Test Plan:
- Configured MySQL to fail with a retryable error, e.g. good host but bad port.
- Ran `bin/config set ...`.
- Before: saw retry warnings on stderr.
- After: no retry warnings on stderr.
- (Turned off suppression code artificially and verified warnings still appear under normal startup.)
Maniphest Tasks: T13403
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20781
Summary: Depends on D20779. Ref T13403. Bad parameters may cause this call to fail without setting an error code; if it does, catch the issue and go down the normal connection error pathway.
Test Plan:
- With "mysql.port" set to "quack", ran `bin/storage probe`.
- Before: wild mess of warnings as the code continued below and failed when trying to interact with the connection.
- After: clean connection failure with a useful error message.
Maniphest Tasks: T13403
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20780
Summary: Ref T13403. We currently emit a useful error message, but it's not tailored and has a stack trace. Since this is a relatively routine error and on the first-time-setup path, tailor it so it's a bit nicer.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/config set ...` with an unwritable "local.json".
- Ran `bin/config set ...` normally.
Maniphest Tasks: T13403
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20779
Summary:
Ref T13286. The current (very safe / conservative) rules for retrying git reads generalize to git writes, so we can use the same ruleset in both cases.
Normally, writes converge rapidly to only having good nodes at the head of the list, so this has less impact than the similar change to reads, but it generally improves consistency and allows us to assert that writes which can be served will be served.
Test Plan:
- In a cluster with an up node and a down node, pushed changes.
- Saw a push to the down node fail, retry, and succeed.
- Did some pulls, saw appropriate retries and success.
- Note that once one write goes through, the node which received the write always ends up at the head of the writable list, so nodes need to be explicitly thawed to reproduce the failure/retry behavior.
Maniphest Tasks: T13286
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20778
Summary: Ref T13286. When retrying a read request, keep retrying as long as we have canididate services. Since we consume a service with each attempt, there's no real reason to abort early, and trying every service allows reads to always succeed even if (for example) 8 nodes of a 16-node cluster are dead because of a severed network link between datacenters.
Test Plan: Ran `git pull` in a clustered repository with an up node and a down node; saw retry count dynamically adjust to available node count.
Maniphest Tasks: T13286
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20777
Summary:
Depends on D20775. Ref T13286. When a Git read request fails against a cluster and there are other nodes we could safely try, try more nodes.
We DO NOT retry the request if:
- the client read anything;
- the client wrote anything;
- or we've already retried several times.
Although //some// requests where bytes went over the wire in either direction may be safe to retry, they're rare in practice under Git, and we'd need to puzzle out what state we can safely emit.
Since most types of failure result in an outright connection failure and this catches all of them, it's likely to almost always be sufficient in practice.
Test Plan:
- Started a cluster with one up node and one down node, pulled it.
- Half the time, hit the up node and got a clean pull.
- Half the time, hit the down node and got a connection failure followed by a retry and a clean pull.
- Forced `$err = 1` so even successful attempts would retry.
- On hitting the up node, got a "failure" and a decline to retry (bytes already written).
- On hitting the down node, got a failure and a real retry.
- (Note that, in both cases, "git pull" exits "0" after the valid wire transaction takes place, even though the remote exited non-zero. If the server gave Git everything it asked for, it doesn't seem to care if the server then exited with an error code.)
Maniphest Tasks: T13286
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20776
Summary:
Ref T13286. To support request retries, allow the service lookup method to return an ordered list of structured service references.
Existing callsites continue to immediately discard all but the first reference and pull a URI out of it.
Test Plan: Ran `git pull` in a clustered repository with an "up" node and a "down" node, saw 50% serivce failures and 50% clean pulls.
Maniphest Tasks: T13286
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20775
Ref T13401. The checkout UI didn't get fully updated to the new View objects,
and account handles are still manually building a URI that goes to the wrong
place.
Summary:
Ref T13393. See some previous discussion in T13366.
Caching is hard and all approaches here have downsides, but the request cache likely has fewer practical downsides for this kind of policy check than other approaches. In particular, the grant approach (at least, as previously used in Phortune) has a major downside that "Query" classes can no longer fully enforce policies.
Since Phortune no longer depends on grants and they've now been removed from instances, drop the mechanism completely.
Test Plan: Grepped for callsites, found none.
Maniphest Tasks: T13393
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20754
Summary:
Ref T13393. While doing a shard migration in the Phacility cluster, we'd like to stop writes to the migrating repository. It's safe to continue serving reads.
Add a simple maintenance mode for making repositories completely read-only during maintenance.
Test Plan: Put a repository into read-only mode, tried to write via HTTP + SSH. Viewed web UI. Took it back out of maintenance mode.
Maniphest Tasks: T13393
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20748
Summary:
Fixes T13336.
- Prevent `--no-indexes` from being combined with `--for-replica`, since combining these options can only lead to heartbreak.
- In `--for-replica` mode, dump caches too. See discussion in T13336. It is probably "safe" to not dump these today, but fragile and not correct.
- Mark the "MarkupCache" table as having "Cache" persistence, not "Data" persistence (no need to back it up, since it can be fully regenerated from other datasources).
Test Plan: Ran `bin/storage dump` with various combinations of flags.
Maniphest Tasks: T13336
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20743
Summary:
Fixes T13389. Currently, we try to "newSubtypeMap()" unconditionally, even if the underlying object does not support subtypes.
- Only try to build a subtype map if subtype transactions are actually being applied.
- When subtype transactions are applied to a non-subtypable object, fail more explicitly.
Test Plan: Clicked "Make Editable" in a fresh Calendar transaction form, got an editable form instead of a fatal from "newSubtypeMap()". (Calendar events are not currently subtypable.)
Maniphest Tasks: T13389
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20741
Summary:
Fixes T13390. We have some old code which doesn't dynamically select between "utf8mb4" and "utf8". This can lead to dumping utf8mb4 data over a utf8 connection in `bin/storage dump`, which possibly corrupts some emoji/whales.
Instead, prefer "utf8mb4" if it's available.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/storage dump` and `bin/storage shell`, saw sub-commands select utf8mb4 as the client charset.
Maniphest Tasks: T13390
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20742
Summary:
Depends on D20739. Ref T13366. Slightly modularize/update components of order views, and make orders viewable from either an account context (existing view) or an external context (new view).
The new view is generally simpler so this mostly just reorganizes existing code.
Test Plan: Viewed orders as an account owner and an external user.
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20740
Summary: Depends on D20738. Ref T13366. Fixes T8389. Now that the infrastructure is in place, actually send email to external addresses.
Test Plan: Used `bin/phortune invoice` to generate invoices and saw associated external accounts receive mail in `bin/mail list-outbound`.
Maniphest Tasks: T13366, T8389
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20739
Summary: Depends on D20737. Ref T13367. Allow external addresses to have their access key rotated. Account managers can disable them, and anyone with the link can permanently unsubscribe them.
Test Plan: Enabled/disabled addresses; permanently unsubscribed addresses.
Maniphest Tasks: T13367
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20738
Summary: Ref T13366. This gives each account email address an "external portal" section so they can access invoices and receipts without an account.
Test Plan: Viewed portal as user with authority and in an incognito window.
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20737
Summary:
Depends on D20734. Ref T13366. This makes the cart/order flow work under the new policy scheme with no "grantAuthority()" calls.
It prepares for a "Void Invoice" action, although the action doesn't actually do anything yet.
Test Plan: With and without merchant authority, viewed and paid invoices and went through the other invoice interaction workflows.
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20735
Summary: Refresh the 404 text since it hasn't been updated in a while, and swap the "Save Query" button back to grey since I never got used to blue.
Test Plan: Hit 404 page, saved a query.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20734
Summary:
Depends on D20732. Ref T13366. This generally makes the "Merchant" UI look and work like the "Payment Account" UI.
This is mostly simpler since the permissions have largely been sorted out already and there's less going on here and less weirdness around view/edit policies.
Test Plan: Browsed all Merchant functions as a merchant member and non-member.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20733
Summary:
Ref T13366. Depends on D20721. Continue applying UI and policy updates to the last two Phortune objects.
Charges aren't mutable and Carts are already transactional, so this is less involved than prior changes.
Test Plan: Viewed various charge/order interfaces as merchants and account members.
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20732
Summary:
Depends on D20720. Ref T13366.
- Use modern policies and policy interfaces.
- Use new merchant authority cache.
- Add (some) transactions.
- Move MFA from pre-upgrade-gate to post-one-shot-check.
- Simplify the autopay workflow.
- Use the "reloading arrows" icon for subscriptions more consistently.
Test Plan: As a merchant-authority and account-authority, viewed, edited, and changed autopay for subscriptions.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20721
Summary:
Depends on D20719. Currently, if a page throws an exception (like a policy exception) and rendering that exception into a response (like a policy dialog) throws another exception (for example, while constructing breadcrumbs), we only show the orginal exception.
This is usually the more useful exception, but sometimes we actually care about the other exception.
Instead of guessing which one is more likely to be useful, throw them both as an "AggregateException" and let the high-level handler flatten it for display.
Test Plan: {F6749312}
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20720
Summary:
Depends on D20718. Ref T13366. Ref T13367.
- Phortune payment methods currently do not use transactions; update them.
- Give them a proper view page with a transaction log.
- Add an "Add Payment Method" button which always works.
- Show which subscriptions a payment method is associated with.
- Get rid of the "Active" status indicator since we now treat "disabled" as "removed", to align with user expectation/intent.
- Swap out of some of the super weird div-form-button UI into the new "big, clickable" UI for choice dialogs among a small number of options on a single dimension.
Test Plan:
- As a mechant-authority and account-authority, created payment methods from carts, subscriptions, and accounts. Edited and viewed payment methods.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13367, T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20719
Summary:
Depends on D20717. Ref T13366. Make PhortunePaymentMethod use an extended policy interface for consistency with modern approaches. Since Accounts have hard-coded policy behavior (and can't have object policies like "Subscribers") this should have no actual impact on program behavior.
This leaves one weird piece in the policy dialog UIs, see T13381.
Test Plan: Viewed and edited payment methods as a merchant and account member. Merchants can only view, not edit.
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20718
Summary: Depends on D20716. Ref T13366. This implements the new policy behavior cleanly in all top-level Phortune payment account interfaces.
Test Plan: As a merchant with an account relationship (not an account member) and an account member, browsed all account interfaces and attempted to perform edits. As a merchant, saw a reduced-strength view.
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20717
Summary:
Depends on D20715. Ref T13366. See that task for discussion.
Replace the unreliable "grantAuthority()"-based check with an actual "can the viewer edit any merchant this account has a relationship with?" check.
This makes these objects easier to use from a policy perspective and makes it so that the `Query` alone can fully enforce permissions properly with no setup, so general infrastructure (like handles and transactions) works properly with Phortune objects.
Test Plan: Viewed merchants and accounts as users with no authority, direct authority on the account, and indirect authority via a merchant relationship.
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20716
Summary:
Depends on D20713. Ref T13366. When a payment account establishes a relationship with a merchant by creating a cart or subscription, create an edge to give the merchant access to view the payment account.
Also, migrate all existing subscriptions and carts to write these edges.
This aims at straightening out Phortune permissions, which are currently a bit wonky on a couple of dimensions. See T13366 for detailed discussion.
Test Plan:
- Created and edited carts/subscriptions, saw edges write.
- Ran migrations, saw edges write.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20715
Summary: Depends on D20697. Ref T8389. Add support for adding "billing@enterprise.com" and similar to Phortune accounts.
Test Plan: Added and edited email addresses for a payment account.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T8389
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20713
Summary:
Ref T13366. Some of the information architecture is a little muddy here, notably an item called "Billing / History" which contains payment methods.
Split things up a bit to prepare for adding support for "Email Addresses".
Test Plan: {F6676988}
Maniphest Tasks: T13366
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20697
Summary: See PHI1396. Ideally this would be some kind of general-purpose tie-in to object relationships, but see D18456 for precedent.
Test Plan: Used `maniphest.edit` to edit associated commits for a task.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20731
Summary:
Fixes T13386. See PHI1391. These constraints largely exist already, but are not yet exposed to Conduit.
Also, tweak some keys to support the underlying query.
Test Plan: Ran `differential.revision.search` queries with the new constraints.
Maniphest Tasks: T13386
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20730
Summary: Ref T13382. Currently, the "Make Administrator" action in the web UI does state-based MFA. Convert it to one-shot MFA.
Test Plan: Empowered and unempowered a user from the web UI, got one-shot MFA'd. Empowered a user from the CLI, no MFA issues.
Maniphest Tasks: T13382
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20729
Summary:
Ref T13386. If you issue `differential.query` with a large offset (like 3000), it can overheat regardless of policy filtering and fail with a nonsensical error message.
This is because the overheating limit is based only on the query limit, not on the offset.
For example, querying for "limit = 100" will never examine more than 1,100 rows, so a query with "limit = 100, offset = 3000" will always fail (provided there are at least that many revisions).
Not all numbers work like you might expect them to becuase there's also a 1024-row fetch window, but basically small limits plus big offsets always fail.
Test Plan: Artificially reduced the internal window size from 1024 to 5, then ran `differential.query` with `offset=50` and `limit=3`. Before: overheated with weird error message. After: clean result.
Maniphest Tasks: T13386
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20728
Summary:
Ref T13385. Currently, if you run `arc diff` in a CWD with more than 255 characters, the workflow fatals against the length of the `sourcePath` database column.
In the long term, removing this property is likely desirable.
For now, truncate long values and continue. This only meaningfully impacts relatively obscure interactive SVN workflows negatively, and even there, "some arc commands are glitchy in very long working directories in SVN" is still better than "arc diff fatals".
Test Plan:
- Modified `arc` to submit very long source paths.
- Ran `arc diff`.
- Before: Fatal when inserting >255 characters into `sourcePath`.
- After: Path truncated at 255 bytes.
Maniphest Tasks: T13385
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20727
Summary:
Fixes T13384. Currently, the subtype "disabled" configuration is not respected when selecting fields for `ROLE_EDIT`.
The only meaningful caller for `ROLE_EDIT` is transaction validation, but transaction validation should respect fields being disabled by subtype configuration.
Test Plan:
- Added a "required" Maniphest custom field "F", then "disabled" it in a subtype "S".
- Created a task of subtype "S".
- Before: Form submission fails with error "F is required", even though the field is not actually visible on the form and can not be set.
- After: Form submits cleanly and creates the task.
Maniphest Tasks: T13384
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20726
Summary:
Fixes T13382. Depends on D20724. These ancient scripts are no longer necessary since we've had a smooth web-based onboarding process for a long time.
I retained `bin/user empower` and `bin/user enable` for recovering from situations where you accidentally delete or disable all administrators. This is normally difficult, but some users are industrious.
Test Plan: Grepped for `accountadmin` and `add_user.php`, found no more hits.
Maniphest Tasks: T13382
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20725
Summary:
Ref T13382.
- Remove "bin/people profileimage" which previously generated profile image caches but now feels obsolete.
- Replace it with "bin/user", with "enable" and "empower" flows. This command is now focused on regaining access to an install after you lock your keys inside.
- Document the various ways to unlock objects and accounts from the CLI.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/user enable` and `bin/user empower` with various flags.
- Grepped for `people profileimage` and found no references.
- Grepped for `bin/people` and found no references.
- Read documentation.
Maniphest Tasks: T13382
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20724
Summary: Fixes T13383. Provide a basic "drydock.resource.search". Also allow "drydock.lease.search" to be queried by resource PHID.
Test Plan: Called "drydock.resource.search" and "drydock.lease.search" with various constraints.
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13383
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20723
Summary: See PHI1392. This flag is `--all`, not `--all-caches`.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/cache purge --all`.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20722
Summary:
Fixes T13378. If we join Ferret tables and page, we can end up with an ambiguous `id` column here.
Explicitly refer to "project.x" in all cases that we're interacting with the project table.
Test Plan:
- Changed page size to 3.
- Issued a Projects query for "~e", matching more than 3 results.
- Clicked "Next Page".
- Before: ambiguous id column fatal.
- After: next page.
Maniphest Tasks: T13378
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20714
Summary:
Ref T13369. See that task for discussion.
When the discovery daemon finds more than 64 commits to import, demote the worker queue priority of the resulting tasks.
Test Plan:
- Pushed one commit, ran `bin/repository discover --verbose --trace ...`, saw commit import with "at normal priority" message and priority 2500 ("PRIORITY_COMMIT").
- Pushed 3 commits, set threshold to 3, ran `bin/repository discover ...`, saw commist import with "at lower priority" message and priority 4000 ("PRIORITY_IMPORT").
Maniphest Tasks: T13369
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20712
Summary:
Ref T13373. When you "bin/config set x ..." a value, the success message ("Set x ...") is somewhat ambiguous and can be interpreted as "First, you need to set x..." rather than "Success, wrote x...".
Make the messaging more explicit. Also make this string more translatable.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/config set ...` with various combinations of flags, saw more clear messaging.
Maniphest Tasks: T13373
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20711
Summary: Fixes T13374. The "Temporary Failures" row is missing a cell definiton from the addition of "Average Queue Time".
Test Plan: Viewed "/daemon/" with some temporary failures and and odd number of rows above the "Temporary Failures" row. Saw cell properly zebra-striped.
Maniphest Tasks: T13374
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20710
Summary:
Ref T13349. This is almost the same change as D20678, but for project profiles instead of user profiles.
The general reproduction case is "view a project where you can't see more than 50 of the 500 most recent feed stories".
Test Plan:
- Forced all queries to overheat.
- Viewed a project profile page.
- Before: overheating fatal near top level.
- After: damage contained to feed panel.
Maniphest Tasks: T13349
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20704
Summary: See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T229757>. The "autofocus" attribute mostly just works, so add it to this input.
Test Plan: As a user with TOTP enabled, established a new session. Saw browser automatically focus the "App Code" input on the TOTP prompt screen.
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20703
Summary:
Fixes T13370. We currently show an "Award Badge" button conditionally, based on whether the viewer can award any badges or not.
The query to test this may overheat and this pattern isn't consistent with other UI anyway. Stop doing this test.
Test Plan:
- Created 12 badges.
- As a user who could not edit any of the badges, viewed the "Badges" section of a user profile.
Maniphest Tasks: T13370
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20702
Summary: Fixes T13368. Some workflows (like "Move tasks to...") execute board layout without objects to update. In these cases, we can hit a warning because `objectPHIDs` is not initialized to `array()`.
Test Plan: Went through the "Move tasks to..." workflow on a workboard, no longer saw a warning when trying to iterate over an empty `objectPHIDs` list.
Maniphest Tasks: T13368
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20701
Summary:
Ref T13368. Currently, both visible and hidden columns are shown in the "Move tasks to..." dropdown on workflows from workboards.
When the dropdown contains hidden columns, move them to a separate section to make it clear that they're not likely targets.
Test Plan:
- Used "Move tasks to project..." targeting a board with no hidden columns. Saw a single ungrouped dropdown.
- Used "Move tasks to project..." targeting a board with hidden columns. Saw a dropdown grouped into "Visible" and "Hidden" columns.
Maniphest Tasks: T13368
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20700
Summary:
Ref T13368. Proxy columns should not be selectable from this workflow. If you want to move tasks to milestone/subproject X, do "Move tasks to project..." and pick X as the project.
(This could be made to work some day.)
Test Plan: Went through a "Move tasks to project..." workflow targeting a project with subprojects. No longer saw subproject columns presented as dropdown options.
Maniphest Tasks: T13368
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20699
Summary: Ref T13368. The column options presented to the user are currently incorrect because the wrong set of columns are drawn from.
Test Plan: On a workboard, used "Move tasks to project..." to target another board, saw that board's columns.
Maniphest Tasks: T13368
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20698
Summary:
Fixes T13341. Currently, cart emails (invoices/receipts) are sent to members of the associated merchant account. This was just a simple way to keep an eye on things when this was first written.
The system works fine, and recent changes (almost certainly D20525) stopped these emails from working (presumably because of the slightly weird merchant permissions model).
This could be sorted out in more detail, but it looks like the path forward is to introduce a side channel for email anyway (via T8389), and that's a better way to implement this behavior since it means the normal recipients won't see a bunch of random staff/merchant email addresses on their receipts.
Test Plan: Grepped for `merchant` in this editor.
Maniphest Tasks: T13341
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20696
Summary:
Ref T13339. If a search pattern matches more than once on a line, we currently render the line incorreclty, duplicating some of the text.
`substr()` is being called as though the third parameter was `end_offset`, but it's actually `length`. Correct the parameter.
Test Plan:
Before:
{F6676625}
After:
{F6676623}
Maniphest Tasks: T13339
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20695
Summary:
Fixes T8830. Fixes T13364.
- The inability to destroy objects from the web UI is intentional. Make this clear in the messaging, which is somewhat out of date and partly reflects an earlier era when things could be destroyed.
- `bin/remove destroy` can't rewind time. Document expectations around the "put the cat back in the bag" use case.
Test Plan: Read documentation, clicked through both workflows.
Maniphest Tasks: T13364, T8830
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20694
Summary: Ref T13358. This is very minimal, but technically works. The eventual goal is to generate PDF invoices to make my life easier when I have to interact with Enterprise Vendor Procurement.
Test Plan: {F6672439}
Maniphest Tasks: T13358
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20692
Summary:
Fixes T13356. This option is supported and works fine, it just isn't documented.
Add documentation and fix the config option to actually link to it to make life a little easier.
Test Plan: Read documentation.
Maniphest Tasks: T13356
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20691
Summary: Fixes T13355. This didn't appear to be a ton of extra work, we just didn't get it for free in the original implementation in D14635.
Test Plan:
- Saw "date" custom fields appear in Conduit API documentation for "maniphest.edit".
- Set custom "date" field to null and non-null values via the API.
{F6666582}
Maniphest Tasks: T13355
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20690
Summary: Ref T4900. We may execute a bad query here if the task has no projects at all.
Test Plan: Edited a task with no new or old projects. Instead of an exception, things worked.
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20689
Summary:
Fixes T13353. If you:
- Visit a blog post and save the URI.
- Move the blog post to a different blog.
- Revisit the old URI.
...we currently 404. We know what you're trying to do and should just redirect you to the new URI instead. We already do this if you visit a URI with a noncanonical slug.
Test Plan:
- Created post A.
- Copied the live URI.
- Moved it to a different blog.
- Visited the saved URI from the earlier step.
- Before: 404.
- After: Redirect to the canonical URI.
Maniphest Tasks: T13353
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20688
Summary: Depends on D20686. Fixes T13350. Now that "slowvote.poll.search" exists, deprecate this old method.
Test Plan: Reviewed method description in Condiut API console in the web UI.
Maniphest Tasks: T13350
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20687
Summary:
Depends on D20685. Ref T13350. Currently:
- When a SearchEngine parameter is marked as hidden from Conduit, we may still render a table of possible values. Instead, only render the table if the parameter is actually usable.
- The table header is hard-coded to say `'statuses'`, which is just a silly mistake. (Most commonly, this table does have `statuses` constants.)
Test Plan: Viewed the Conduit API documentation for the new "slowvote.poll.search" API method, saw more sensible display behavior.
Maniphest Tasks: T13350
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20686
Summary: Ref T13350. Add a modern "*.search" API method for Slowvote so "slowvote.info" can be deprecated with a reasonable replacement.
Test Plan: Used Conduit test console to call method, saw reasonable results.
Maniphest Tasks: T13350
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20685
Summary:
Depends on D20680. Ref T4900. The "BoardLayoutEngine" operates on PHIDs without knowledge of the underlying objects, but this means it has to be sensitive to PHID input order when falling back to a default layout order.
We use "default layout order" on workboards which are sorted by "Natual" order but which have one or more cards which no user has ever reordered. For example, if you add 10 tasks to a project, then create a board, there's no existing order for those tasks in the "Backlog" column. The layout engine uses the input order to place them in the column, with the expectation that input order is ID/creation order, so new cards will end up on top.
I think this code never really made an explicit effort to guarantee that the LayoutEngine received objects in ID order, and it just sort of happened to by coincidence and good fortune. Some recent change has disrupted this, so the edit operation can end up with the PHIDs arranged in arbitrary order.
Explicitly put them in ID order so we always get an implicit default layout order to fall back to. Also, update to `msortv()`.
Test Plan:
- Tagged several tasks with project X, a project without a board yet.
- Created the project X workboard.
- (Did not drag any tasks around on the project X board!)
- Viewed the board in "Natural" order.
This creates a view of the board where tasks are ordered by implicit/virtual/input order. The expectation, and "view" behavior of this board, is that this order is "newest on top".
- Edited one of the cards on the board, changing the title (don't reorder it!)
- Before: page state synchronized with cards in arbitrary/random/different order.
- After: page state synchronized with cards in the same order as before ("newest on top").
Reviewers: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20681
Summary:
Ref T4900. When a card is edited, we currently emit an update notification for all the projects the task is tagged with. This isn't quite the right set:
- We want to emit notifications for projects the task //was previously// tagged with, so it can be removed from boards it should no longer be part of.
- We want to emit notifications for ancestors of projects the task is or was tagged with, so parent project boards can be updated.
- However, we don't need to emit notifications for projects that don't actually have workboards.
Adjust the notification set to align better to these rules.
Test Plan:
- Removal of Parent Project: Edited a task on board "A > B", removing the "B" project tag. Saw board A update in another window.
- Normal Update: Edited a task title on board X, saw board X update in another window.
- Used `bin/aphlict debug` to inspect the notification set, saw generally sensible-seeming data going over the wire.
Reviewers: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20680
Summary: Ref T13350. This ancient API method is missing modern policy checks.
Test Plan:
- Set visibility of vote X to "Only: epriestley".
- Called "slowvote.info" as another user.
- Before: retrieved poll title and author.
- After: policy error.
- Called "slowvote.info" on a visible poll, got information before and after.
Maniphest Tasks: T13350
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20684
Summary:
Fixes T13348. Currently, the Harbormaster UI shows "Restart All Builds", but it really means "Restart Restartable Builds", which is often fewer than "All" builds (because of autobuilds, permissions, and/or configuration).
Remove the misleading term "All" and make the workflow preview exactly which builds will and will not be affected, and why.
Test Plan:
{F6636313}
{F6636314}
{F6636315}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13348
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20679
Summary:
Depends on D20673. Ref T13343. Since we're now putting log IDs in email, make the UI a little better for working with log IDs.
Some day, this page might have actions like "report this as suspicious" or whatever, but I'm not planning to do any of that for now.
Test Plan: {F6608631}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20674
Summary:
Depends on D20672. Ref T13343. When a user requests an account access link via email:
- log it in the activity log; and
- reference the log in the mail.
This makes it easier to ban users misusing the feature, provided they're coming from a single remote address, and takes a few steps down the pathway toward a button in the mail that users can click to report the action, suspend account recovery for their account, etc.
Test Plan:
- Requested an email recovery link.
- Saw request appear in the user activity log.
- Saw a reference to the log entry in the mail footer.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20673
Summary: Depends on D20671. Ref T13343. Now that log types are modular, provide a datasource/tokenizer for selecting them since we already have a lot (even after I purged a few in D20670) and I'm planning to add at least one more ("Request password reset").
Test Plan: {F6608534}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20672
Summary:
Depends on D20670. Ref T13343. The user activity message log types are currently hard-coded, so only upstream code can really use the log construct.
Under the theory that we're going to keep this log around going forward (just focus it a little bit), modularize things so the log is extensible.
Test Plan:
Grepped for `UserLog::`, viewed activity logs in People and Settings.
(If I missed something here -- say, misspelled a constant -- the effect should just be that older logs don't get a human-readable label, so stakes are very low.)
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20671
Summary: Fixes T13349. If the user profile page feed query overheats, it currently takes the whole page with it. Contain the blast to a smaller radius.
Test Plan: {F6633322}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13349
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20678
Summary: Humble user cannot silence/mute project if he/she has no CAN_EDIT permissions in it. You can actually leave it but if project is locked - then you're scr*wed.
Test Plan:
1. On a testing phabricator instance created a dummy project
2. Changed that project permissions CAN_EDIT to be by admin only
3. Added poor soul with no CAN_EDIT permissions
4. Logged it in with poor soul
5. Tried to silence the project
6. The Project is successfully silenced
7. User is happy :)
Reviewers: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Reviewed By: epriestley, #blessed_reviewers
Subscribers: Korvin, Pawka
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20675
Summary:
Depends on D20669. Ref T13343. Currently, the user activity log includes a number of explicit administrative actions which some administrator (not a normal user or a suspicious remote address) takes. In most/all cases, these changes are present in the user profile transaction log too, and that's //generally// a better place for them (for example, it doesn't get GC'd after a couple months).
Some of these are so old that they have no writers (like DELETE and EDIT). I'd generally like to modernize this a bit so we can reference it in email (see T13343) and I'd like to modularize the event types as part of that -- partly, cleaning this up makes that modularization easier.
There's maybe some hand-wavey argument that administrative vs non-administrative events could be related and might be useful to see in a single log, but I can't recall a time when that was actually true, and we could always build that kind of view later by just merging the two log sources, or by restoring double-writes for some subset of events. In practice, I've used this log mostly to look for obvious red flags when users report authentication difficulty (e.g., many unauthorized login attempts), and removing administrative actions from the log is only helpful in that use case.
Test Plan: Grepped for all the affected constants, no more hits in the codebase.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20670
Summary: Depends on D20668. Ref T13343. Just an easy cleanup/simplification while I'm here.
Test Plan: `grep` for `getActionConstant()`
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20669
Summary:
Depends on D20667. Ref T13343. Password auth currently uses an older rate limiting mechanism, upgrade it to the modern "SystemAction" mechanism.
This mostly just improves consistency, although there are some tangential/theoretical benefits:
- it's not obvious that making the user log GC very quickly could disable rate limiting;
- if we let you configure action limits in the future, which we might, this would become configurable for free.
Test Plan:
- With CAPTCHAs off, made a bunch of invalid login attempts. Got rate limited.
- With CAPTCHAs on, made a bunch of invalid login attempts. Got downgraded to CAPTCHAs after a few.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20668
Summary:
Depends on D20666. Ref T13343. In D20666, I limited the rate at which a given user account can be sent account recovery links.
Here, add a companion limit to the rate at which a given remote address may request recovery of any account. This limit is a little more forgiving since reasonable users may plausibly try multiple variations of several email addresses, make typos, etc. The goal is just to hinder attackers from fishing for every address under the sun on installs with no CAPTCHA configured and no broad-spectrum VPN-style access controls.
Test Plan: {F6607846}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20667
Summary:
Depends on D20665. Ref T13343. We support CAPTCHAs on the "Forgot password?" flow, but not everyone configures them (or necessarily should, since ReCAPTCHA is a huge external dependency run by Google that requires you allow Google to execute JS on your domain) and the rate at which any reasonable user needs to take this action is very low.
Put a limit on the rate at which account recovery links may be generated for a particular account, so the worst case is a trickle of annoyance rather than a flood of nonsense.
Test Plan: {F6607794}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20666
Summary:
Depends on D20664. Ref T13343. There's a reasonable value for the default "Email Login" auth message (generic "you reset your password" text) that installs may reasonably want to replace. Add support for a default value.
Also, since it isn't completely obvious where this message shows up, add support for an extended description and explain what's going on in more detail.
Test Plan:
- Viewed message detail page, saw more detailed information.
- Sent mail (got default), overrode message and sent mail (got custom message), deleted message (got default again).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20665
Summary:
Depends on D20663. Ref T13343. Currently, if an Auth message hasn't been customized yet, clicking the message type takes you straight to an edit screen to create a message.
If an auth message has already been customized, you go to a detail screen instead.
Since there's no detail screen on the "create for the first time" flow, we don't have anywhere to put a more detailed description or a preview of a default value.
Add a view screen that works if a message is "empty" so we can add this stuff.
(The only reason we don't already have this is that it took a little work to build; this also generally improves the consistency and predictability of this interface.)
Test Plan: {F6607665}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20664
Summary:
Depends on D20662. Ref T13343. Installs may reasonably want to change the guidance users receive in "Email Login"/"Forgot Password" email.
(In an upcoming change I plan to supply a piece of default guidance, but Auth Messages need a few tweaks for this.)
There's probably little reason to provide guidance on the "Set Password" flow, but any guidance one might issue on the "Email Login" flow probably doesn't make sense on the "Set Password" flow, so I've included it mostly to make it clear that this is a different flow from a user perspective.
Test Plan:
- Set custom "Email Login" and "Set Password" messages.
- Generated "Email Login" mail by using the "Login via email" link on the login screen.
- Generated "Set Password" email by trying to set a password on an account with no password yet.
- Saw my custom messages in the resulting mail bodies.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20663
Summary:
Ref T13343. This makes "Password Reset" email a little more consistent with other modern types of email. My expectation is that this patch has no functional changes, just organizes code a little more consistently.
The new `setRecipientAddress()` mechanism deals with the case where the user types a secondary (but still verified) address.
Test Plan:
- Sent a normal "login with email" email.
- Sent a "login with email to set password" email by trying to set a password on an account with no password yet.
- Tried to email reset a bot account (no dice: they can't do web logins so this operation isn't valid).
- Tested existing "PeopleMailEngine" subclasses:
- Created a new user and sent a "welcome" email.
- Renamed a user and sent a "username changed" email.
- Reviewed all generated mail with `bin/mail list-outbound`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13343
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20662
Summary:
See D20650. Long ago, this got added as "pastebin", but that's the name of another product/company, not a generic term for paste storage.
Rename the database to `phabricator_paste`.
(An alternate version of this patch would rename `phabricator_search` to `phabricator_bing`, `phabricator_countdown` to `phabricator_spacex`, `phabricator_pholio` to `phabricator_adobe_photoshop`, etc.)
Test Plan:
- Grepped for `pastebin`, now only found references in old patches.
- Applied patches.
- Browsed around Paste in the UI without encountering issues.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20661
Summary:
Fixes T13345. See D20650. Currently, `PhabricatorCursorPagedPolicyAwareQuery` does a JOIN against the "title" field so it can apply additional ranking/ordering conditions to the query.
This means that documents with no title (which don't have this field) are always excluded from the result set.
We'd prefer to include them, just not give them any bonus ranking/relevance boost. Use a LEFT JOIN so they get included.
Test Plan:
- Applied D20650 (diff 1), made it use raw `getTitle()` as the document title, indexed a paste with no title.
- Searched for a term in the paste body.
- Before change: no results.
- After change: found result.
{F6601159}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13345
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20660
Summary:
Depends on D20654. Ref T4900. When a task is edited, emit a "workboards" event for all boards it appears on (in a future change, this should also include all boards it //previously// appeared on, and all parents of both sets of boards -- but I'm just getting things working for now).
When we receive a "workboards" event, check if the visible board should be updated.
Aphlict has a complicated intra-window leader/follower election system which could let us process this update event exactly once no matter how many windows a user has open with the same workboard. I'm not trying to do any of this since it seems fairly rare. It makes sense for events like "you have new notifications" where we don't want to generate 100 Ajax calls if the user has 100 windows open, but very few users seem likely to have 100 copies of the same workboard open.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/aphlict debug`.
- Opened workboard A in two windows, X and Y.
- Edited and moved tasks in window X.
- Saw "workboards" messages in the Aphlict log.
- Saw window Y update in nearly-real-time (locally, this is fast enough that it feels instantaneous).
Then:
- Stopped the Aphlcit server.
- Edited a task.
- Started the Aphlict server.
- Saw window Y update after a few moments (i.e., update in response to a reconnect).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20656
Summary:
Fixes T13342. This does a few different things, although all of them seem small enough that I didn't bother splitting it up:
- Support export of "remarkup" custom fields as text. There's some argument here to export them in some kind of structure if the target is JSON, but it's hard for me to really imagine we'll live in a world some day where we really regret just exporting them as text.
- Support export of "date" custom fields as dates. This is easy except that I added `null` support.
- If you built PHP from source without "--enable-zip", as I did, you can hit the TODO in Excel exports about "ZipArchive". Since I had a reproduction case, test for "ZipArchive" and give the user a better error if it's missing.
- Add a setup check for the "zip" extension to try to avoid getting there in the first place. This is normally part of PHP so I believe users generally won't hit it, I just hit it because I built from source. See also T13232.
Test Plan:
- Added a custom "date" field. On tasks A and B, set it to null and some non-null value. Exported both tasks to Excel/JSON/text, saw null and a date, respectively.
- Added a custom "remarkup" field, exported some values, saw the values in Excel.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13342
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20658
Summary:
Depends on D20653. Ref T4900. Pass ordering details to the reload endpoint so it can give the client accurate ordering/header information in the response.
The removed comment mentions this, but here's why this is a difficult mess:
- In window A, view a board with "Group by: Owner" and no tasks owned by "Alice". Since "Alice" owns no tasks, this means the columns do not have an "Assigned to: Alice" header!
- In window B, edit task T and assign it to Alice.
- In window A, press "R".
Window A now not only needs to update to properly reflect the state of task T, it actually needs to draw a new "Assigned to: Alice" header in every column.
Fortunately, the "group by" code anticipates this being a big mess, is fairly careful about handling it, and the client can handle this state change and the actual code change here isn't too involved. This is just causing a lot of not-very-obvious indirect effects in the pipeline to handle these situations that need complex redraws.
Test Plan:
- After making various normal edits/creates/moves in window A, pressed "R" in window B. Saw ordering reflected correctly after sync.
- Went through the whole "Group by: Owner" + assign to unrepresented owner flow above. After pressing "R", saw "Assigned to: Alice" appear on the board.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20654
Summary:
Depends on D20652. Ref T4900. When the user presses "R", send a list of cards currently visible on the client and their version numbers.
On the server:
- Compare the client verisons to the server versions so we can skip updates for objects which have not changed. (For now, the client version is always "1" and the server version is always "2", so this doesn't do anything meaningful, and every card is always updated.)
- Compare the client visible set to the server visible set and "remove" any cards which have been removed from the board.
I believe this means that "R" always puts the board into the right state (except for some issues with client orderings not being fully handled yet). It's not tremendously efficient, but we can make versioning better (using the largest object transaction ID) to improve that and loading the page in the first place doesn't take all that long so even sending down the full visible set shouldn't be a huge problem.
Test Plan:
- In window A, removed a card from a board.
- In window B, pressed "R" and saw the removal reflected on the client.
- (Also added cards, edited cards, etc., and didn't catch anything exploding.)
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20653
Summary:
Depends on D20639. Ref T4900. Currently, "BoardResponseEngine" has a `setObjectPHID()` method. This is called after edit operations to mean "we just edited object X, so we know it needs to be updated".
Move toward `setUpdatePHIDs(...)` in all cases, with `setUpdatePHIDs(array(the-object-we-just-edited))` as a special case of that. After this change, callers pass:
- An optional list of PHIDs they know need to be updated on the client. Today, this is always be a card we just edited (on edit/move flows), or a sort of made-up list of PHIDs for the moment (when you press "R"). In the future, the "R" endpoint will do a better job of figuring out a more realistic update set.
- An optional list of PHIDs currently visible on the client. This is used to update ordering details and mark cards for removal. This is currently passed by edit/move, but not by pressing "R" (it will be in the future).
- An optional list of objects. The "R" workflow has to load these anyway, so we can save a couple queries by letting callers pass them. For now, the edit/move flows still rely on the engine to figure out what it needs to load.
This does very little to actually change client behavior, it mostly just paves the way for the next update to the "R" workflow to make it handle add/remove cases properly.
Test Plan:
- Edited and moved cards on a workboard.
- Pressed "R" to reload a workboard.
Neither of these operations seem any worse off than they were before. They still don't fully work:
- When you edit a card and delete the current workboard project from it, it remains visible. This is also the behavior on `master`. This is sort of intentional since we don't necessarily want to make these cards suddenly disappear? Ideally, we would probably have some kind of "tombstone" state where the card can still be edited but can't be dragged, and the next explicit user interaction would clean up old tombstones. This interaction is very rare and I don't think it's particularly important to specialize.
- When a card is removed from the board, "R" can't currently figure out that it should be removed from the client. This is because the client does not yet pass a "visiblePHIDs" state. It will in an upcoming change.
- The "R" flow always sends a full set of card updates, and can not yet detect that some cards have not changed.
- There's a TODO, but some ordering stuff isn't handled yet.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20652
Summary:
Depends on D20638. Ref T4900. This is an incremental step toward proper workboard updates.
Currently, the client can mostly update its view because we do updates when you edit or move a card, and the client and server know how to send lists of card updates, so a lot of the work is already done.
However, the code assumes we're only updating/redrawing one card at a time. Make the client accept and process multiple card updates.
In future changes, I'll add versioning (so we only update cards that have actually changed), fix the "TODO" around ordering, and move toward actual Aphlict-based real-time updates.
Test Plan:
- Opened the same workboard in two windows.
- Edited cards in one window, pressed "R" (capital letter, with no modifier keys) to reload the second window.
- Saw edits and moves reflected accurately after sync, except for some special cases of header/order interaction (see "TODO").
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20639
Summary: I was poking around in `PhabricatorAuthProviderViewController` and noticed that none of the subclass-specific rendering was working. Figured out that no one ever calls `PhabricatorAuthProviderConfigTransaction->setProvider()`, so instead of adding all those calls, just pull the provider out of the config object.
Test Plan:
Before: {F6598145}
After: {F6598147}
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20655
Summary: Ref T2784. These are lookin' pretty stable. Subclasses like `DiffusionGetLintMessagesConduitAPIMethod` have their warnings about unstable methods, so just remove this warning in the base class.
Test Plan: Loaded `/conduit`, observed lack of unstable warnings. Only unstable methods are now `diffusion.getlintmessages`, `diffusion.looksoon`, and `diffusion.updatecoverage`.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T2784
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20651
Summary: Forgot to post this after D20394. Fixes T7667.
Test Plan:
* Edited some providers with the config locked and unlocked.
* Opened the edit form with the config unlocked, locked the config, then saved, and got a sensible error: {F6576023}
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T7667
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20645
Summary: See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/phd-status-calls-to-undefined-method-when-theres-no-instance/2918>. This call should be `logInfo()`.
Test Plan:
- Purged `PHABRICATOR_INSTANCE` from my environment. In a Phacility development environment, it comes from loading `services/`.
- Ran `bin/phd stop` with all daemons already stopped.
- Before: bad call.
- After: helpful error.
- Ran some other `bin/phd start`, `bin/phd status`, etc., to kick the tires.
- Grepped for remaining `writeInfo()` calls (found none).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20649
Summary: See rPaacc62463d61. D20551 added some `CAN_INTERACT` checks, but `CAN_INTERACT` needs to be checked with `canInteract()` to fall back to `CAN_VIEW` properly. D20558 cleaned up most of this but missed one callsite; fix that up too.
Test Plan: Removed a comment on a commit.
Reviewers: amckinley, 20after4
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20648
Summary: Ref T13332. This fix isn't terribly satisfying, but resolves the issue: this behavior may attempt to build HTML blocks with metadata after Javascript footer rendering has started. Use `hsprintf()` to flatten the markup earlier.
Test Plan: Put a `T123` reference in the description of a Pholio image, then loaded a mock.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13332
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20647
Summary:
Ref D20645. Start making this view a little more useful:
{F6573605}
Test Plan: Mk. 1 eyeball
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20646
Summary:
Depends on D20636. Ref T4900. Previously, some workflows didn't know how to identify the default state for the board, so they needed explicit ("force") parameters.
Everything uses the same state management code now so we can rip out the old stuff.
Test Plan: Changed board filters, selected a custom filter, edited a custom filter.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20637
Summary:
Depends on D20635. Ref T4900. Fixes T13316.
Currently, "Move Tasks to Column..." first prompts you to select a project, then prompts you for a column. The first step is prefilled with the current project, so the common case (moving to another column on the same board) requires you to confirm that you aren't doing an off-project move by clicking "Continue", then you can select a column.
This isn't a huge inconvenience and the workflow isn't terribly common, but it's surprising enough that it has come up a few times as a stumbling block. Particularly, we're suggesting to users that they're about to pick a column, then we're asking them to pick a project. The prompt also says "Project: XYZ", not "Project: Keep in current project" or something like that.
Smooth this out by splitting the action into two better-cued flows:
- "Move Tasks to Project..." is the current flow: pick a project, then pick a column.
- The project selection no longer defaults to the current project, since we now expect you to usually use this flow to move tasks to a different project.
- "Move Tasks to Column..." prompts you to select a column on the same board.
- This just skips step 1 of the workflow.
- This now defaults to the current column, which isn't a useful selection, but is more clear.
In both cases, the action cue ("Move tasks to X...") now matches what the dialog actually asks you for ("Pick an X").
Test Plan:
- Moved tasks across projects and columns within the same project.
- Hit all (I think?) the error cases and got sensible error and recovery behavior.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13316, T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20636
Summary: Depends on D20634. Ref T4900. Ref T13316. I'm planning to do a bit of additional cleanup here in followups, but this separates the main workflow out of the common controller.
Test Plan:
- Used "Move Tasks to Column..." to move some tasks on a board.
- Tried to move an empty column, hit an error.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13316, T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20635
Summary: Depends on D20633. Ref T4900. Separate the "Bulk Edit Tasks..." flow out of the main workboard controller.
Test Plan:
- Used "Bulk Edit Tasks" on a column with some tasks, got an appropraite edit operation.
- Used "Bulk Edit Tasks" on an empty column, got an error.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20634
Summary:
Depends on D20632. Ref T4900. As with other workflows on the board controller, this one is currently in the giant main "do everything" method. Move it to a separate controller.
This makes one material improvement: previously, we built the full board and did layout on all the cards before building the query. However, we do not actually need to do this: we don't need the cards. Instead, just do layout without handing over any card PHIDs. This is slightly faster, particularly on large boards.
Test Plan:
- Clicked "View as Query" on a board, got a query page for the column.
- Applied a custom filter, then clicked "View as Query" on a board. Got a query page merging the two filters.
- Applied a custom filter, then clicked "Veiw as Query" on a board, in a subproject column. Got a query page merging the two filters, respecting the project-ness of the column.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20633
Summary:
Depends on D20629. Ref T4900. Currently, the "Advanced Filter..." workflow on workboards (where you build a custom query) is inline in the main board controller.
This is because the filter flow depends on some of the board view state: we want to start with the current filter applied to the board, and preserve other state after you change the filter.
Now that `ViewState` can handle state management, we can separate this stuff out pretty easily.
Test Plan:
- Changed filters on a board.
- Applied a custom filter to a board.
- Changed the ordering of a board, then applied a custom filter. Verified "Cancel" and "Apply Filter" both preserve the order state.
- Changed the ordering of a board, then applied a custom filter, intentionally making a mistake in configuring the filter by entering an invalid date. Saw a dialog with an error. After correcting the error, saw state preserved properly.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20632
Summary:
Depends on D20628. Ref T4900. Currently, the "Save Current Order/Filter As Default" flows on workboards duplicate some state construction, and require parameters to be passed to them explicitly.
Now that state management is separate, they can reuse a bit more code and be made to look more like other similar controllers.
Test Plan:
- Changed the default order of a workboard.
- Changed the default filter of a workboard.
- Changed the order of a board to something non-default, then changed the filter, then saved the new filter as the default. Saw the modified order preserved and the modified filter removed, so I ended up in the right ("most correct") place: on the board, with my custom order in a URI parameter, and no filter URI parameter so I could see my new default filter behavior. This is an edge case that's not terribly important to get right, but we do get it right.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20629
Summary:
Depends on D20627. Ref T4900. If a user orders a board by "Sort by Title", then toggles the visibility of hidden columns, we want to keep the board sorted by title. To accomplish this, we pass the board state around to all the workflows here.
Pull the "bag of state properties" code out of the View controller. This class basically:
- reads state from a request (order, hidden, filter);
- manages defaults;
- provides the application with the current settings; and
- generates URIs with "?order=X&hidden=Y&filter=Z" to preserve state.
This is still a little questionable/transitional since some of the controllers need more cleanup.
Test Plan:
Toggled state, order, filters, clicked around various workflows and saw the filters preserved.
A lot of these workflows are pretty serious edge cases. For example, here's a feature this implements:
- Changed workboard order to "Title".
- Selected "Bulk Edit Tasks..." in an empty column and command-clicked it to open the link in a new window.
- Hovered over "Cancel".
- Saw the link properly generate with "?order=title", preserving the order.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20628
Summary: Depends on D20626. Ref T4900. On this controller, "id" is a separate property, but serves little purpose and complicates separating state management. Remove it.
Test Plan: Bulk edited a column, managed filters, did show/hide on columns, edited a column.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20627
Summary:
Ref T4900. The Workboard view controller currently has a lot of different responsibilities (it's ~1,500 lines long) because it has to manage the board filter/sort state.
I'd like to split it up and make it easier to move some workboard features (like "move all tasks in column...") to other Controllers, so we can have smaller controllers implementing specific workflows.
I think the state handling isn't really all that bad, it just needs to be separated a little better than it currently is.
To start with, remove the unused "slug" property.
Test Plan: Searched for "slug", got no hits. This class is final and the property is private, so this is certainly unused.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T4900
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20626
Summary: Depends on D20624. Fixes T13330. The OAuth client pages are using some out-of-date rendering conventions; update them to modern conventions.
Test Plan:
Viewed a page, saw a modern header layout + curtain:
{F6534135}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13330
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20625
Summary:
Ref T13330. Handles for "OAuthServerClient" objects currently do not have a URI, which causes some obscure fallout like a missing "Close" button when examining their transactions.
Add a URI.
Test Plan:
- Viewed an OAuth server client detail page.
- Edited a policy, changing it to a custom policy.
- Clicked "Custom Policy" in the resulting transaction to view a dialog explaining the changes.
- Before change: dialog has no close button.
- After change: dialog has a close button.
{F6534121}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13330
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20624
Summary:
See D20540. I mistakenly multiplied some strenghts by 100 and others by 1000 when converting them to integers for `PhutilSortVector`.
Multiply them all by 100 (that is, divide the ones which were multiplied by 1000 by 10) to put things back the way they were.
Test Plan: quick mafs
Reviewers: amckinley, richardvanvelzen
Reviewed By: richardvanvelzen
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20622
Summary: See PHI1319. Ref T13291. Bump the remarkup cache version, since the old JIRA / Asana rules may exist in the partial cached representation of remarkup blocks from older versions.
Test Plan: Typed some comments with various formatting, saw remarkup work fine.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13291
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20619
Summary:
Ref T13328. Currently, we read from `mysqldump` something like this:
```
until (done) {
for (100 ms) {
mysqldump > in-memory-buffer;
}
in-memory-buffer > disk;
}
```
This general structure isn't great. In this use case, where we're streaming a large amount of data from a source to a sink, we'd prefer to have a "select()"-like way to interact with futures, so our code is called after every read (or maybe once some small buffer fills up, if we want to do the writes in larger chunks).
We don't currently have this (`FutureIterator` can wake up every X milliseconds, or on future exit, but, today, can not wake for readable futures), so we may buffer an arbitrary amount of data into memory (however much data `mysqldump` can write in 100ms).
Reduce the update frequency from 100ms to 10ms, and limit the buffer size to 32MB. This effectively imposes an artificial 3,200MB/sec limit on throughput, but hopefully that's fast enough that we'll have a "wake on readable" mechanism by the time it's a problem.
Test Plan:
- Replaced `mysqldump` with `cat /dev/zero` as the source command, to get fast input.
- Ran `bin/storage dump` with `var_dump()` on the buffer size.
- Before change: saw arbitrarily large buffers (300MB+).
- After change: saw consistent maximum buffer size of 32MB.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13328
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20617
Summary:
Fixes T13326. In D20571, I slightly generalized construction of an iterator over a set of files, but missed some code in other "bin/files ..." commands which was also affected.
Today, basically all of these workflows define their own "--all" and "names" flags. Pull these definitions up and implement them more consistently.
Test Plan: Ran multiple different `bin/files` commands with different combinations of arguments, saw consistent handling of iterator construction.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13326
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20614
Summary:
Fixes T13327. Currently, when we try to bill an account and all members are disabled, we fail temporarily and the task retries forever.
At least for now, just treat this as a permanent failure.
Test Plan:
- Used `bin/phortune invoice` to generate a normal invoice for a regular subscription.
- Disabled all the account members, then tried again. Got a helpful permanent failure:
```
$ ./bin/phortune invoice --subscription PHID-PSUB-kbedwt5cyepoc6tohjq5 --auto-range
Set current time to Mon, Jun 24, 2:47 PM.
Preparing to invoice subscription "localb.phacility.com" from Fri, May 31, 10:14 AM to Sun, Jun 30, 10:14 AM.
WARNING
Manually invoicing will double bill payment accounts if the range overlaps an
existing or future invoice. This script is intended for testing and
development, and should not be part of routine billing operations. If you
continue, you may incorrectly overcharge customers.
Really invoice this subscription? [y/N] y
[2019-06-24 14:47:57] EXCEPTION: (PhabricatorWorkerPermanentFailureException) All members of the account ("PHID-ACNT-qp54y3unedoaxgkkjpj4") for this subscription ("PHID-PSUB-kbedwt5cyepoc6tohjq5") are disabled. at [<phabricator>/src/applications/phortune/worker/PhortuneSubscriptionWorker.php:88]
arcanist(head=experimental, ref.master=d92fa96366c0, ref.experimental=db4cd55d4673), corgi(head=master, ref.master=6371578c9d32), instances(head=stable, ref.master=ba9e4a19df1c, ref.stable=37fb1f4917c7), libcore(), phabricator(head=master, ref.master=65bc481c91de, custom=11), phutil(head=master, ref.master=7adfe4e4f4a3), services(head=master, ref.master=5424383159ac)
#0 PhortuneSubscriptionWorker::doWork() called at [<phabricator>/src/infrastructure/daemon/workers/PhabricatorWorker.php:124]
#1 PhabricatorWorker::executeTask() called at [<phabricator>/src/infrastructure/daemon/workers/PhabricatorWorker.php:163]
#2 PhabricatorWorker::scheduleTask(string, array, array) called at [<phabricator>/src/applications/phortune/management/PhabricatorPhortuneManagementInvoiceWorkflow.php:169]
#3 PhabricatorPhortuneManagementInvoiceWorkflow::execute(PhutilArgumentParser) called at [<phutil>/src/parser/argument/PhutilArgumentParser.php:457]
#4 PhutilArgumentParser::parseWorkflowsFull(array) called at [<phutil>/src/parser/argument/PhutilArgumentParser.php:349]
#5 PhutilArgumentParser::parseWorkflows(array) called at [<phabricator>/scripts/setup/manage_phortune.php:21]
$
```
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13327
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20613
Summary: Ref T13321. The daemons no longer write PID files, so we no longer need to pass any of this stuff to them.
Test Plan: Grepped for affected symbols.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13321
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20608
Summary:
Ref T13321. This gets rid of the last pidfile readers in Phabricator; we just use the process list instead.
These commands always only work on the current instance since they don't make much sense otherwise.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/phd start` and `bin/phd reload` with and without daemons running.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13321
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20606
Summary:
Ref T13321. Fixes T11037. Realign "bin/phd status" to just mean "show daemon processes on this host".
The value of `bin/phd status` as a mixed remote/local command isn't clear, and the current output is a confusing mess (see T11037).
This also continues letting us move away from PID files.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/phd status`, saw sensible local process status.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13321, T11037
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20604
Summary:
Ref T13321. Previously, the behavior was:
- `bin/phd stop --gently`: Stop all daemons with PID files that belong to the current instance.
- `bin/phd stop`: Stop all daemons with PID files that belong to the current instance. Complain if there are more processes.
- `bin/phd stop --force`: Stop all processes that look like daemons, ignoring instances.
The new behavior is:
- `bin/phd stop`: Stop all processes that look like daemons and belong to the current instance.
- `bin/phd stop --force`: Stop all processes that look like daemons, period.
Test Plan: Grep / documentation only.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13321
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20602
Summary:
Ref T13321. Depends on D20600. Make `bin/phd stop` mean:
- `bin/phd stop`: Stop all processes which have daemon process titles. If we're instanced, only stop daemons for the current instance.
- `bin/phd stop --force`: Stop all processes which have deamon process titles for any instance.
We no longer read or care about PID files on disk, and this moves us away from PID files.
This makes unusual flag `--gently` do nothing. A followup will update the documentation and flags to reflect actual usage/behavior.
This also removes the ability to stop specific PIDs. This was somewhat useful long, long ago when you might explicitly run different copies of the `PullLocal` daemon with flags to control which repositories they updated, but with the advent of clustering it's no longer valid to run custom daemon loadouts.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/phd start`, then `bin/phd stop`. Saw instance daemons stop. Ran `bin/phd stop --force`, saw all daemons stop.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13321
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20601
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/cannot-audit-a-git-commit/2848>. In D20581, I made some audit behavior dependent upon identities, but the actual edit flow doesn't load them. This can cause us to raise an "attach identities first" exception in the bowels of the edit workflow and trigger unexpected behavior at top level.
Load identities when editing a commit so that the transaction flows have access to identity information and can use it to figure out if a user is an author, etc.
Test Plan:
- As an auditor, applied an "Accept Commit" action to an open audit after D20581.
- Before patch: accept no-ops internally since the preconditions throw.
- After patch: accept works properly.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20612
Summary:
Ref T13291. See PHI1312. Currently, if you link to a JIRA or Asana issue with an anchor (`#asdf`) or query parameters (`?a=b`), we:
- treat the link as an external object reference and attempt a lookup on it;
- if the lookup succeeds, we discard the fragment or parameters when re-rendering the rich link (with the issue/task title).
Particularly, the re-rendering part uses the canonical URI of the object, and can discard these parameters/fragments, which is broken/bad.
As a first pass at improving this, just don't apply special behavior for links with anchors or parameters -- simply treat them as links.
In some future change, we could specialize this behavior and permit certain known parameters or anchors or something, but these use cases are likely fairly marginal.
Test Plan:
Before:
{F6516392}
After:
{F6516393}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13291
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20592
Summary: Ref T13319. Ref PHI1302. Migrate `PhabricatorEditEngineConfigurationTransaction` to modular transactions and add some additional transaction rendering to make these edits less opaque.
Test Plan: Hit all the form edit controllers, viewed resulting transaction timeline.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T13319
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20595
Summary:
Fixes T13324. Ref PHI1288. Currently, if you edit an Owners package that has some paths with no trailing slashes (like `README.md`) so their internal names and display names differ (`/README.md` display, vs `/README.md/` internal), the "Show Details" in the transaction log shows the path as re-normalized even if you didn't touch it.
Instead, be more careful about handling display paths vs internal paths.
(This code on the whole is significantly less clear than it probably could be, but this issue is so minor that I'm hesitant to start ripping things out.)
Test Plan:
- In a package with some paths like `/src/` and some paths like `/src`:
- Added new paths.
- Removed paths.
- Changed paths from `/src/` to `/src`.
- Changed paths from `/src` to `/src/`.
In all cases, the "paths" list and the transaction record identically reflected the edit in the way I expected them to.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13324
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20596
Summary:
Ref T13319. Currently, transactions about changes to a default form value use a raw internal key for the affected field and don't show the actual value change.
An ideal implementation will likely require us to specialize a great deal of rendering, but we can do much better than we currently do without too much work:
- Try to pull the actual `EditField` object for the key so we can `getLabel()` it and get a human-readable label (like `Visible To` instead of `policy.view`).
- Add a "(Show Changes)" action that dumps the raw values as more-or-less JSON, so you can at least figure out what happened if you're sophisticated enough.
Test Plan:
Before:
{F6516640}
After:
{F6516642}
The quality of "Show Details" varies a lot. For some fields, like "Description", it's pretty good:
{F6516645}
For others, like "Assigned To", it's better than nothing but pretty technical:
{F6516647}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13319
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20594
Summary:
Fixes T13317. On `admin.phacility.com`, an enterprising user added `noreply@admin.phacility.com` to their account. This caused them to become CC'd on several support issues over the last year, because we send mail "From" this address and it can get CC'd via reply/reply all/whatever else.
The original driving goal here is that if I reply to a task email and CC you on my reply, that should count as a CC in Phabricator, since this aligns with user intent and keeps them in the loop.
This misfire on `noreply@` is ultimately harmless (being CC'd does not grant the user access permission, see T4411), but confusing and undesirable. Instead:
- Don't allow reserved addresses ("noreply@", "ssladmin@", etc) to trigger this subscribe-via-CC behavior.
- Only count verified addresses as legitimate user recipients.
Test Plan:
- Added a `bin/mail receive-test --cc ...` flag to make this easier to test.
- Sent mail as `bin/mail receive-test --to X --as alice --cc bailey@verified.com`. Bailey was CC'd both before and after the change.
- Sent mail as `bin/mail receive-test --to X --as alice --cc unverified@imaginary.com`, an address which Bailey has added to her account but not verified.
- Before change: Bailey was CC'd on the task anyway.
- After change: Bailey is not CC'd on the task.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13317
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20593
Summary:
Fixes T13312. Currently, {nav Manage > Branches} has a list of branches on the same page. This has a few minor issues:
- Pager is at the top (see T13312), which is weird.
- "Default" icon is mystery meat.
- Table is kind of pointless/redundant in general?
Previously, this table had more information about technical status of each branch (autoclose/track/publish) but most of these details have been simplified/eliminated, and the main "Branches" view now has more information than it did before.
Get rid of this and just link to the main view.
Test Plan: Viewed "Branches" in UI, saw a link to the main view instead of a weird table.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13312
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20584
Summary:
Fixes T13309. If you void the warranty on a repository on disk and turn it into a shallow clone, Phabricator currently can't serve it.
We don't support hosting shallow working copies, but we should still parse and proxy the protocol rather than breaking in a mysterious way.
Test Plan:
- Created a shallow working copy with `mv X X.full; git clone --depth Y file://.../X.full X` in the storage directory on disk.
- Cloned it with `git clone <uri>`.
- Deleted all the refs inside it so the wire only has "shallow" frames; cloned it.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13309
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20577
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/view-task-from-maniphest-e-mail-doesnt-have-url/2827>.
I added "View Task" / "View Commit" buttons recently but the logic for generating URIs isn't quite right. Fix it up.
Test Plan:
- Commented on a task.
- Used `bin/mail show-outbound --id ... --dump-html > out.html` to dump the HTML.
- Previewed the HTML in a browser.
- This time, actually clicked the button to go to the task.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20586
Summary:
Fixes T13304. Shell pipes and redirects do not have robust behavior when errors occur. We provide "--compress" and "--output" flags as robust alternatives, but do not currently recommend their use.
- Recommend their use, since their error handling behavior is more robust in the face of issues like full disks.
- If "--compress" is provided but won't work because the "zlib" extension is missing, raise an explicit error. I believe this extension is very common and this error should be rare. If that turns out to be untrue, we could take another look at this.
- Also, verify some flag usage sooner so we can exit with an error faster if you mistype a "bin/storage dump" command.
Test Plan: Read documentation, hit affected error cases, did a dump and spot-checked that it came out sane looking.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13304
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20572
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/unhandled-exception-when-logging-in-with-mfa/2828>. The recent changes to turn `msort()` on a vector an error have smoked out a few more of these mistakes.
These cases do not meaningfully rely on sort stability so there's no real bug being fixed, but we'd still prefer `msortv()`.
Test Plan: Viewed MFA and External Account settings panels. Did a `git grep 'msort(' | grep -i vector` for any more obvious callsites, but none turned up.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20587
Summary:
Fixes T13315. See that task for discussion.
Without `--background`, we currently treat this as a catastrophic failure, but it's relatively routine for some repository states. We can safely continue reparsing other steps.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/repository reparse --all X --message` with commits faked to all be unreachable. Got warnings instead of a hard failure on first problem.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13315
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20588
Summary:
Depends on D20580. Fixes T13311. When we choose which actions to show a user, we can either show them "auditor" actions (like "raise concern") or "author" actions (like "request verification").
Currently, we don't show "author" actions if you're the author of the commit via an identity mapping, but we should. Use identity mappings where they exist.
(Because I've implemented `getEffectiveAuthorPHID()` in a way that requires `$data` be attached, it's possible this will make something throw a "DataNotAttached" exception, but: probably it won't?; and that's easy to fix if it happens.)
Test Plan:
See D20580. As `@alice`, viewed the commit in the UI.
- Before: got auditor actions presented to me.
- After: got author actions.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13311
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20581
Summary:
Ref T13311. We currently don't use committer identity mappings when triggering audits, so if a user is only associated with an identity via manual mapping we won't treat them as the author.
Instead, use the identity and manual mapping if they're available.
Test Plan:
- Pushed a commit as `xyz <xyz@example.org>`, an address with no corresponding user.
- In the UI, manually associated that identity with user `@alice`.
- Ran `bin/repository reparse --publish <hash>` to trigger audits and publishing for the commit.
- Before: observed the `$author_phid` was `null`.
- After: observed the `$author_phid` is Alice.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13311
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20580
Summary:
Fixes T13310. Use cases in the form "users with no access to any spaces can not <do things>" are generally unsupported (that is, we consider this to mean that the install is misconfigured), but "log out" is a somewhat more reasonable sort of thing to do and easy to support.
Drop the requirement that users be logged in to access the Logout controller. This skips the check for access to any Spaces and allows users with no Spaces to log out.
For users who are already logged out, this just redirects home with no effect.
Test Plan:
- As a user with access to no Spaces, logged out. (Before: error; after: worked).
- As a logged-out user, logged out (was redirected).
- As a normal user, logged out (normal logout).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13310
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20578
Summary:
Fixes T13313. The "Download Raw Diff" workflow in Differential currently uses an older way of interacting with Files that doesn't engage the chunk engine and can't handle 8MB+ files.
Update to `IteratorFileUploadSource` -- we're still passing in a single giant blob, but this approach can be chunked.
This will still break somewhere north of 8MB (it will break at 2GB with the PHP string limit if nowhere sooner, since we're putting the entire raw diff in `$raw_diff` rather than using a rope/stream) but will likely survive diffs in the hundreds-of-megabytes range for now.
Test Plan:
- Added `str_repeat('x', 1024 * 1024 * 9)` to the `$raw_diff` to create a 9MB+ diff.
- Configured file storage with no engine explicitly configured for >8MB chunks (i.e., "reasonably").
- Clicked "Download Raw Diff".
- Before: misleading file storage engine error ("no engine can store this file").
- After: large, raw diff response.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13313
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20579
Summary: Ref T13303. See B22967. This should be "msortv()" but didn't get updated properly.
Test Plan: The system works!
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13303
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20585
Summary: Ref T13303. I upgraded this to a vector-based sort but forgot to type a "v", which means the sort has different stability under PHP 5.5. See D20582 for a root cause fix.
Test Plan: Locally, on PHP7, not much changes. I expect this to fix the odd selection of title stories in mail and notification stories on `secure`, which is running PHP 5.5.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13303
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20583
Summary:
Fixes T13307. We currently require "CAN_EDIT" to sign actions, but it's fine to sign a comment with only "CAN_INTERACT".
Since the actions like "Accept Revision" already work like this, the fix is one line.
Test Plan: {F6488135}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13307
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20574
Summary:
Ref T13306. Currently, there's no easy way to import a third-party local-disk file dump into a Phacility instance.
Add some more options to `bin/files migrate` to support this. In particular, this enables:
```
$ ./bin/files --from-engine local-disk --engine amazon-s3 --local-disk-source path/to/backup
```
...to import these files into S3 directly.
These are general-purpose options and theoretically useful in other use cases, although realistically those cases are probably very rare.
Test Plan: Used `bin/files` with the new options to move files in and out of local disk storage in an arbitrary backup directory. Got clean exports/imports.
Reviewers: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13306
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20571
Summary:
Ref T13298. Add a simple profiler as a starting point to catch any egregiously expensive rules or conditions.
This doesn't profile rule actions, so if "Add subscriber" (or whatever) is outrageously expensive it won't show up on the profile. Right now, actions get evaluated inside the Adapter so they're hard to profile. A future change could likely dig them out without too much trouble. I generally expect actions to be less expensive than conditions.
This also can't pin down a //specific// condition being expensive, but if you see that `H123` takes 20s to evaluate you can probably guess that the giant complicated regex is the expensive part.
Test Plan: {F6473407}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13298
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20566
Summary:
Depends on D20566. Ref T13298. See PHI1280. Currently, there's no clean way to disable problematic personal rules. This comes up occasionally and sometimes isn't really the best approach to solving a problem, but is a generally reasonable capability to provide.
Allow Herald rules (including personal rules) to be disabled/enabled via `bin/herald rule ... --disable/--enable`.
Test Plan: Used the CLI to disable and enable a personal rule.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: jmeador
Maniphest Tasks: T13298
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20567
Summary:
Fixes T13300. Currently, if you create a revision and then immediately land it (either using `--draft` or just beating Harbormaster to the punch) it can be stuck in "Draft" forever.
Instead, count landing changes like this as a publishing action.
Test Plan:
- Used `arc diff --hold` to create a revision, then pushed the commit immediately.
- Before change: revision closed, but was stuck in draft.
- After change: revision closed and was promoted out of draft.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13300
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20565
Summary:
See PHI1118. That issue may describe more than one bug, but the recent ordering changes to the import pipeline likely make this at least part of the problem.
Previously, commits would always close associated revisions before we made it to the "publish" step. This is no longer true, so we might be triggering audits on a commit before the associated revision actually closes.
Accommodate this by counting a revision in either "Accepted" or "Published (Was Previously Accepted)" as "reviewed".
Test Plan:
- With commit C affecting paths in package P with "Audit Unreviewed Commits and Commits With No Owner Involvement", associated with revision R, with both R and C authored by the same user, and "R" in the state "Accepted", used `bin/repository reparse --publish <hash>` to republish the commit.
- Before change: audit by package P triggered.
- After change: audit by package P no longer triggered.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20564
Summary:
Ref T13303. In D20525 I fixed an issue where transaction rendering could use cached values with the wrong viewer by reloading transactions.
However, reloading transactions may also reorder them as a side effect, since `withPHIDs(...)` does not imply an order. This can make transaction rendering order in mail wrong/inconsistent.
Instead, reorder the transactions before continuing so mail transaction order is consistent.
Test Plan: Applied a group of transactions to a task, saw a more consistent rendering order in mail after the change.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13303
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20563
Summary:
See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T1050>. Some time ago, we added a "View Revision" button to Differential mail. This hasn't created any problems and generally seems good / desirable.
It isn't trivial to just add everywhere since we need a translation string in each case, but at least add it to Maniphest for now. Going forward, we can fill in more applications as they come up.
Test Plan:
Used `bin/mail show-outbound --id <x> --dump-html`:
{F6470461}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20561
Summary:
See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T88655>. This is very marginal, but we currently allow comments consisting of //only// whitespace.
These are probably always mistakes, so treat them like completely empty comments.
(We intentionally do not trim leading or trailing whitespace from comments when posting them becuase leading spaces can be used to trigger codeblock formatting.)
Test Plan:
- Posted empty, nonempty, and whitespace-only comments.
- Whitespace-only comments now have the same behavior as truly empty comments (e.g., do not actually generate a transaction).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20562
Summary: These instructions are fairly old and can be a little fancier and more clear in the context of modern Phabricator. Drop the reference to "HPHP", link the actual timezone list, wordsmith a little.
Test Plan: d( O_o )b
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20560
Summary:
See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T902>. Currently, timezones are rendered with their raw internal names (like `America/Los_Angeles`) which include underscores.
Replacing underscores with spaces is a more human-readable (and perhaps meaningfully better for things like screen readers, although this is pure speculation).
There's some vague argument against this, like "administrators may need to set a raw internal value in `phabricator.timezone` and this could mislead them", but we already give a pretty good error message if you do this and could improve hinting if necessary.
Test Plan: Viewed timezone list in {nav Settings} and the timezone "reconcile" dialog, saw a more-readable "Los Angeles".
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20559
Summary:
Ref T13289. See D20551. In D20551, I implemented some "CAN_INTERACT" checks against certain edits, but these checks end up testing "CAN_INTERACT" against objects like Conpherence threads which do not support a distinct "CAN_INTERACT" permission. I misrembered how the "CAN_INTERACT" fallback to "CAN_VIEW" actually works: it's not fully automatic, and needs some explicit "interact, or view if interact is not available" checks.
Use the "interact" wrappers to test these policies so they fall back to "CAN_VIEW" if an object does not support "CAN_INTERACT". Generally, objects which have a "locked" state have a separate "CAN_INTERACT" permission; objects which don't have a "locked" state do not.
Test Plan: Created and edited comments in Conpherence (or most applications other than Maniphest).
Reviewers: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13289
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20558
Summary:
Ref T13289. If you do this:
- Subscribe to a task (so we don't generate a subscribe side-effect later).
- Prepare a transaction group: sign with MFA, change projects (don't make any changes), add a comment.
- Submit the transaction group.
...you'll get prompted "Some actions don't have any effect (the non-change to projects), apply remaining effects?".
If you confirm, you get MFA'd, but the MFA flow loses the "continue" confirmation, so you get trapped in a workflow loop of confirming and MFA'ing.
Instead, retain the "continue" bit through the MFA.
Also, don't show "You can't sign an empty transaction group" if there's a comment.
See also T13295, since the amount of magic here can probably be reduced. There's likely little reason for "continue" or "hisec" to be magic nowadays.
Test Plan:
- Went through the workflow above.
- Before: looping workflow.
- After: "Continue" carries through the MFA gate.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13289
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20552
Summary: Ref T11741. See PHI1276. After the switch to "Ferret", this table has no remaining readers or writers.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/storage upgrade -f`, no warnings.
- Grepped for class name, table name, `stemmedCorpus` column; got no relevant hits.
- Did a fulltext search.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T11741
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20549
Summary:
Ref T13289. This tightens up a couple of corner cases around locked threads.
Locking is primarily motivated by two use cases: stopping nonproductive conversations on open source installs (similar to GitHub's feature); and freezing object state for audit/record-keeping purposes.
Currently, you can edit or remove comments on a locked thread, but neither use case is well-served by allowing this. Require "CAN_INTERACT" to edit or remove a comment.
Administrators can still remove comments from a locked thread to serve "lock a flamewar, then clean it up", since "Remove Comment" on a comment you don't own is fairly unambiguously an administrative action.
Test Plan:
- On a locked task, tried to edit and remove my comments as a non-administrator. Saw appropriate disabled UI state and error dialogs (actions were disallowed).
- On a locked task, tried to remove another user's comments as an administrator. This works.
- On a normal task, edited comments normally.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13289
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20551
Summary:
Ref T13289. See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/fatal-error-in-pagination-in-drydock-resources-host-logs-all-logs/2735>.
`bin/drydock lease` and the web UI for reviewing all object logs when there is more than one page of logs didn't get fully updated to the new cursors.
- Use a cursor pager in `bin/drydock lease`.
- Implement `withIDs()` in `LeaseQuery` so the default paging works properly.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/drydock lease`, got a lease with log output along the way.
- Set page size to 2, viewed host logs with multiple pages, paged to page 2.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13289
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20553
Summary:
Depends on D20546. Ref T13283. Currently, if you do something (transactions "A", "B") and Herald does some things in response (transaction "C"), Herald acts only on the things you did ("A", "B") since the thing it did ("C") didn't exist yet, until it ran.
However, if you use the test console to test rules against the object we'll pick up all three transactions since they're all part of the same group. This isn't ideal.
To fix this, skip transactions which Herald applied, since it obviously didn't consider them when it was evaluating.
Test Plan:
- Created a revision, in the presence of a Herald rule that adds reviewers.
- Then, ran the revision through the test console.
- Before: saw the "Herald added reviewers: ..." transaction in the transaction group Herald evaluated.
- After: saw only authentic human transactions.
{F6464064}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13283
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20547
Summary:
Ref T13283. Currently, each Editor sets its own group ID, so if you create a revision and then Herald does some stuff, the two groups of transactions get different group IDs.
This means the test console is slightly misleading (it will only pick up the Herald transactions). It's going to be misleading anyway (Herald obviously can't evaluate Herald transactions) but this is at least a little closer to reality and stops Herald actions from masking non-Herald actions.
Test Plan:
- Created a revision. Herald applied one transaction.
- Used the test console.
- Before: The test console only picked up the single most recent Herald transaction.
- After: The test console picked up the whole transaction group.
{F6464059}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13283
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20546
Summary:
Ref T13289. When you create a Phriction document, you currently get an email with the whole new content as a "diff".
You also get extra transactions in the email and on the page.
This is because Phriction isn't on EditEngine and doesn't mark "create" transactions in a modern way. Get them marked properly to fix these obviously-broken behaviors. This can all go away once Phriction switches to EditEngine, although I don't have any particular plans to do that in the immediate future.
Test Plan:
- Created a new document, viewed email, no longer saw redundant "edited content" transaction or "CHANGES TO CONTENT" diff.
- Updated a document, viewed email, got interdiff.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13289
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20548
Summary:
Ref T13290. Prior to recent changes, if we parsed some commit C which was associated with a revision R, but R was already closed, we'd skip the whole set of updates because the "close the revision" transaction would fail and we'd throw because we did not `setContinueOnNoEffect()`.
We now continue on no effect so we can get the edge ("commit has revision" / "revision has commit"), since we want it in all cases, but this means we may also apply an extra "Updated revision to reflect committed changes" transaction and new diff. This can happen even if we're careful about not trying to apply this transaction to closed revisions, since two workers may race. (Today, we aren't too careful about this.)
To fix this, just make this transaction no-op itself if the revision is already closed by the time it tries to apply.
This happened on D20451 because a merge commit with the same hash as the last diff was pushed, but it's easiest to reproduce by just running `bin/repository reparse --message <commit>`, which updates related revisions with a new diff every time.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/repository reparse --messsage <commit>` several times, on a commit with an associated revision.
- Before: each run attached a new diff and created a new "updated to reflect committed changes" transaction.
- After: repeated runs had no effects.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13290
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20545
Summary:
Ref T13290. Ref T13291. Now that a full URI is a "mention", the full URI in "Differential Revision: ..." also triggers a mention.
Stop it from doing that, since these mentions are silly/redundant/unintended.
The API here is also slightly odd; simplify it a little bit to get rid of doing "append" with "get + append + set".
Test Plan: Used `bin/repository reparse --publish` to republish commits with "Differential Revision: ..." and verified that the revision PHID was properly dropped from the mention list.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13291, T13290
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20544
Summary:
See PHI1222. When we publish several transactions to feed at once, we sort them by "action strength" to figure out which one gets to be the title story.
This sort currently uses `msort()`, which uses `asort()`, which is not a stable sort and has inconsistent behavior across PHP versions:
{F6463721}
Switch to `msortv()`, which is a stable sort. Previously, see also T6861.
If all transactions have the same strength, we'll now consistently pick the first one.
This probably (?) does not impact anything in the upstream, but is good from a consistency point of view.
Test Plan:
Top story was published after this change and uses the chronologically first transaction as the title story.
Bottom story was published before this change and uses the chronologically second transaction as the title story.
Both stories have two transactions with the same strength ("create" + "add reviewer").
{F6463722}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20540
Summary:
Ref T13279. See that task for some discussion.
The accumulations of some of the datasets may be negative (e.g., if more tasks are moved out of a project than into it) which can lead to negative area in the stacked chart.
Introduce `min(...)` and `max(...)` to separate a function into points above or below some line, then mangle the areas to pick the negative and positive regions apart so they at least have a plausible physical interpretation and none of the areas are negative.
This is presumably not a final version, I'm just trying to produce a chart that isn't a sequence of overlapping regions with negative areas that is "technically" correct but not really possible to interpret.
Test Plan: {F6439195}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20506
Summary:
Ref T13279. Currently, we store a fairly low-level description of functions and datasets in a chart. This will create problems with (for example) translating function labels.
If you view a chart someone links you, it should say "El Charto" if you speak Spanish, not "The Chart" if the original viewer speaks English.
To support this, store a slightly higher level version of the chart: the chart engine key, plus configuration parameters. This is very similar to how SearchEngine works.
For example, the burndown chart now stores a list of project PHIDs, instead of a list of `[accumulate [sum [fact task.open <project-phid>]]]` functions.
(This leaves some serialization code with no callsites, but we may eventually have a "CustomChartEngine" which stores raw functions, so I'm leaving it for now.)
As a result, function labels provided by the chart engine are now translatable.
(Note that the actual chart is meaningless since the underlying facts can't be stacked like they're being stacked, as some are negative in some areas of their accumulation.)
Test Plan: {F6439121}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20504
Summary:
Ref T13279. Replace the hard-coded default range with a range computed by examining the chart data.
Instead of having a "Dataset" return a blob of wire data, "Dataset" now returns a structure with raw wire data plus a range. I expect to add more structured data here in future changes (tooltip/hover event data, maybe function labels).
Test Plan: {F6439101}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20503
Summary: Ref T13279. Slightly simplify domain handling by putting all the "[x, y]" stuff in an Interval class. I'm planning to do something similar for ranges next, so this should make that easierr.
Test Plan: Viewed chart, saw same chart as before.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20502
Summary: Ref T13279. Makes charts incrementally more useful by allowing the server to provide labels and colors for functions.
Test Plan: {F6438872}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20501
Summary:
Ref T13279. Adds client-side support for rendering function labels on charts, then labels every function as important data.
Works okay on mobile, although I'm not planning to target mobile terribly heavily for v0.
Test Plan: {F6438860}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20500
Summary:
Ref T13279. This adds support for:
- Datasets can have types, like "stacked area".
- Datasets can have multiple functions.
- Charts can store dataset types and datasets with multiple functions.
- Adds a "stacked area" dataset.
- Makes D3 actually draw a stacked area chart.
Lots of rough edges here still, but the result looks slightly more like it's supposed to look.
D3 can do some of this logic itself, like adding up the area stacks on top of one another with `d3.stack()`. I'm doing it in PHP instead because I think it's a bit easier to debug, and it gives us more options for things like caching or "export to CSV" or "export to API" or rendering a data table under the chart or whatever.
Test Plan: {F6427780}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20498
Summary:
Ref T13279. For now, we need to render burndowns from both Maniphest (legacy) and Projects (new prototype).
Consolidate this logic into a "BurndownChartEngine". I plan to expand this to work a bit like a "SearchEngine", and serve as a UI layer on top of the raw chart features.
The old "ChartEngine" is now "ChartRenderingEngine".
Test Plan:
- Viewed burndowns ("burnups") in Maniphest.
- Viewed burndowns in Projects.
- Saw the same chart.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20496
Summary:
Ref T13279. Since the use cases that have made it upstream are all for relatively complex charts (e.g., requiring aggregation and composition of multiple data series in nontrivial ways) I'm currently looking at an overall approach like this:
- At least for now, Charts provides a low-level internal-only API for composing charts from raw datasets.
- This is exposed to users through pre-built `SearchEngine`-like interfaces that provide a small number of more manageable controls (show chart from date X to date Y, show projects A, B, C), but not the full set of composition features (`compose(scale(2), cos())` and such).
- Eventually, we may put more UI on the raw chart composition stuff and let you build your own fully custom charts by gluing together datasets and functions.
- Or we may add this stuff in piecemeal to the higher-level UI as tools like "add goal line" or "add trend line" or whatever.
This will let the low-level API mature/evolve a bit before users get hold of it directly, if they ever do. Most requests today are likely satisfiable with a small number of chart engines plus raw API data access, so maybe UI access to flexible charting is far away.
Step toward this by adding a "Reports" section to projects. For now, this just renders a basic burnup for the current project. Followups will add an "Engine" layer above this and make the chart it produces more useful.
Test Plan: {F6426984}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20495
Summary:
Depends on D20488. Ref T13279. When installs run `bin/phd start`, start the fact daemon alongside other daemons.
Since "Reports" in Maniphest now relies on Facts data, populate it.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/phd start`, saw the Fact daemon start.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20489
Summary: Depends on D20487. If you `min(1, 2, null)`, you get `null`. We want `1`.
Test Plan: Viewed a "burnup for project X" chart where one dataseries had no datapoints. Saw a sensible domain selected automatically.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20488
Summary:
Depends on D20485. Ref T13279. This removes the ad-hoc charting in Maniphest and replaces it with a Facts-based chart.
(To do this, we build a dashboard panel inline and render it.)
Test Plan: {F6412720}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20486
Summary:
Depends on D20484. Ref T13279. Allows a chart to render as a panel.
Configuring these is currently quite low-level (you have to manually copy/paste a chart key in), but works well enough.
Test Plan: {F6412708}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20485
Summary:
Ref T13279. This changes the chart controller:
- if we have no arguments, build a demo chart and redirect to it;
- otherwise, load the specified chart from storage and render it.
This mostly prepares for "Chart" panels on dashboards.
Test Plan: Visited `/fact/chart/`, got redirected to a chart from storage.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20483
Summary: Depends on D20538. Ref T13291. We now recognize full source URIs, but encoding full URIs isn't super human-friendly and we can't do stuff like relative links with them. Add `{src ...}` as a way to get to this behavior that supports options and more flexible syntax.
Test Plan: {F6463607}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13291
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20539
Summary:
Depends on D20530. Ref T13291. When users paste links to files in Diffusion into remarkup contexts, identify them and specialize the rendering.
When the URIs are embedded with `{...}`, parse them in more detail.
This is a lead-up to a `{src ...}` rule which will use the same `View` but give users more options to customize presentation.
Test Plan: {F6463580}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13291
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20538
Summary:
Ref T13289. In Maniphest, you can currently search for "Owner: none()" to find tasks with no owner, but there's no way to search for "Reviewers: none()" in Differential right now.
Add support for this, since it's consistent and reasonable and doesn't seem too weird or niche.
Test Plan: Searched for "Reviewers: none()", found revisions with no reviewers. Searched for "Reviewers: alice, none()", "Reviewers: alice", and "Reviewers: <no constraint>" and got sensible results.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13289
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20537
Summary: Depends on D20534. Ref T13294. Add export support so you can dump these out, print them on paper, notarize them, and store them in a box under a tree or whatever.
Test Plan: Exported transactions to a flat file, read the file.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13294
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20535
Summary: Depends on D20533. Allow querying for transactions of a specific object type, so you can run queries like "Show all edits to Herald rules between date X and Y".
Test Plan: {F6463478}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20534
Summary: Depends on D20531. Ref T13294. Enable finding raw transactions in particular date ranges or with particular authors.
Test Plan: {F6463471}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13294
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20533
Summary:
Ref T13294. An install is interested in a way to easily answer audit-focused questions like "what edits were made to any Herald rule in Q1 2019?".
We can answer this kind of question with a more granular version of feed that focuses on being exhaustive rather than being human-readable.
This starts a rough version of it and deals with the two major tricky pieces: transactions are in a lot of different tables; and paging across them is not trivial.
To solve "lots of tables", we just query every table. There's a little bit of sleight-of-hand to get this working, but nothing too awful.
To solve "paging is hard", we order by "<dateCreated, phid>". The "phid" part of this order doesn't have much meaning, but it lets us put every transaction in a single, stable, global order and identify a place in that ordering given only one transaction PHID.
Test Plan: {F6463076}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13294
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20531
Summary:
See PHI1268. We currently do some weird width handling when rendering Diffusion readmes in a document directory view.
I think this came from D12330, which used `PHUIDocumentViewPro` to change the font, but we later reverted the font and were left with the `DocumentView`. Other changes after that modified `DocumentView` to have fixed-width behavior, but it doesn't make much sense here since the content panel is clearly rendered full-width.
Today, the `DocumentView` is a more structural element with methods like `setCurtain()`. Just get rid of it to simplify things, at least as a first step.
Test Plan:
Before:
{F6463493}
After:
{F6463492}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20536
Summary:
Depends on D20528. Ref T13291. Ref T13285. Currently, we don't put a timeout on external service calls when enriching URIs for external Asana/JIRA tasks.
Add a 15-second timeout so we'll do something reasonable-ish in the face of a downed service provider. Later, I plan to healthcheck Asana/JIRA providers in a generic way (see T13287) so we can stop making calls if they time out / fail too frequently.
Test Plan:
- Linked to JIRA and Asana tasks in comments.
- Set timeout to 0.0001 seconds, saw requests time out.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13291, T13285
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20530
Summary:
Depends on D20527. Ref T13291. Now that we have more flexible support for URI rewriting, use it for Doorkeeper URIs.
These are used when you set up Asana or JIRA and include the URI to an Asana task or a JIRA issue in a comment.
Test Plan:
- Linked up to Asana and JIRA.
- Put Asana and JIRA URIs in comments.
- Saw the UI update to pull task titles from Asana / JIRA using my OAuth credentials.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13291
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20528
Summary:
Ref T13291. Currently, `T123` is a mention and adds an "alice mentioned this on Txxx." to `T123`, but `https://install.com/T123` is not a mention.
Make the full URI a mention.
Test Plan: Commented a full URI, saw the target object get a mention story in its timeline.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13291
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20527
Summary:
See <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T179591>. Some time ago, all handle rendering preloaded handles: things emitted a list of PHIDs they'd need handles for, then later used only those PHIDs.
Later, we introduced `HandlePool` and lazy/on-demand handle loading. Modern transactions mostly use this to render object PHIDs.
When we build mail, many newer transactions use an on-demand load to fetch handles to render transactions. This on-demand load may use the original viewer (the acting user) instead of the correct viewer (the mail recipient): we fetch and reset handles using the correct viewer, but do not overwrite the active viewer for on-demand loading. This could cause mail to leak the titles of related objects to users who don't have permission to see them.
Instead, just reload the transactions with the correct viewer when building mail instead of playing a bunch of `setViewer()` and `clone` games. Until we're 100% on modular transactions, several pieces of the stack cache viewer or state information.
Test Plan:
- Created task A (public) with subtask B (private).
- Closed subtask B as a user with access to it.
- Viewed mail sent to subscribers of task A who can not see subtask B.
- Before change: mail discloses title of subtask B.
- After change: mail properly labels subtask B as "Restricted Task".
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20525
Summary:
Depends on D20446. Currently, chart functions are both configured through arguments and evaluated through arguments. This sort of conflates things and makes some logic more difficult than it should be.
Instead:
- Function arguments are used to configure function behavior. For example, `scale(2)` configures a function which does `f(x) => 2 * x`.
- Evaluation is now separate, after configuration.
We can get rid of "sourceFunction" (which was basically marking one argument as "this is the thing that gets piped in" in a weird magical way) and "canEvaluate()" and "impulse".
Sequences of functions are achieved with `compose(u, v, w)`, which configures a function `f(x) => w(v(u(x)))` (note order is left-to right, like piping `x | u | v | w` to produce `y`).
The new flow is:
- Every chartable function is `compose(...)` at top level, and composes one or more functions. `compose(x)` is longhand for `id(x)`. This just gives us a root/anchor node.
- Figure out a domain, through various means.
- Ask the function for a list of good input X values in that domain. This lets function chains which include a "fact" with distinct datapoints tell us that we should evaluate those datapoints.
- Pipe those X values through the function.
- We get Y values out.
- Draw those points.
Also:
- Adds `accumluate()`.
- Adds `sum()`, which is now easy to implement.
- Adds `compose()`.
- All functions can now always evaluate everywhere, they just return `null` if they are not defined at a given X.
- Adds repeatable arguments for `compose(f, g, ...)` and `sum(f, g, ...)`.
Test Plan: {F6409890}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20454
Summary: Ref T13272. Since the move to EditEngine, these methods have no callsites.
Test Plan: `grep`
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20484
Summary:
Ref T13283. See PHI1202. See D20519. When we apply a group of transactions, label all of them with the same "group ID".
This allows other things, notably Herald, to figure out which transactions applied together in a faithful way rather than by guessing, even though the guess was probably pretty good most of the time.
Also expose this to `transaction.search` in case callers want to do something similar. They get a list of transaction IDs from webhooks already anyway, but some callers use `transaction.search` outside of webhooks and this information may be useful.
Test Plan:
- Ran Herald Test Console, saw faithful selection of recent transactions.
- Changed hard limit from 1000 to 1, saw exception. Users should be very hard-pressed to hit this normally (they'd have to add 990-ish custom fields, then edit every field at once, I think) so I'm just fataling rather than processing some subset of the transaction set.
- Called `transaction.search`, saw group ID information available.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13283
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20524
Summary:
See PHI1210. For certain large inputs, we spend more time than we need to replacing tabs with spaces. Add some fast paths:
- When a line only has tabs at the beginning of the line, we don't need to do as much work parsing the rest of the line.
- When a line has no unicode characters, we don't need to vectorize it to get the right result.
Test Plan:
- Added test coverage.
- Profiled this, got a ~60x performance increase on a 36,000 line 3MB text file.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20477
Summary:
See PHI1225. Ref T13277. In Diffusion, show "default", "permanent", or "not permanent" when looking at branches.
For repositories with 100 or fewer branches, put default and permanent branches on top.
Test Plan: {F6426814}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: leoluk
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20493
Summary:
Depends on D20507. See PHI1232. Previously, see T13255 and D20209.
Since nothing seems to have exploded after "projects" was exposed, give "subscribers" the same treatment.
Test Plan: Added, removed, and modified subscribers. Queried transactions with "transaction.search", saw sensible "type" and data.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20508
Summary:
Depends on D20510. Ref T5378. When remarkup includes a hyperlink to the current install in the form "/X123" (which is common), load the corresponding object and specialize the rendering.
This doesn't cover everything (notably, no handling for Diffusion paths yet), but does cover a lot of the most common cases.
The "uri" form preserves the URI as written, but adds an icon, tag, and hovercard.
The "{uri}" form is more similar to `{T123}` and shows the object name.
Test Plan: {F6440367}
Reviewers: amckinley, joshuaspence
Reviewed By: joshuaspence
Subscribers: joshuaspence
Maniphest Tasks: T5378
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20512
Summary:
Depends on D20509. See PHI1224. Ref T5378. With some frequency, I paste URIs into the global search input (I am dumb).
When I do this dumb thing, redirect to the URI as though the global search was a URI bar.
Maybe only I am dumb like this, but I don't think it'll hurt anything.
Test Plan: pasted a URI and hit return; tried to eat a rock
Reviewers: amckinley, joshuaspence
Reviewed By: joshuaspence
Maniphest Tasks: T5378
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20510
Summary: Ref T5378. This class was renamed more than a year ago, in D19087. Remove the leftover compatiblity layer.
Test Plan: `grep`
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T5378
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20509
Summary:
See PHI1232, which describes a reasonable use case for wanting information about the "draft" ("Hold as Draft / Do Not Auto-Promote") flag.
Also, flesh out "testPlan" and "summary". It's possible these "blob of remarkup" fields might have metadata some day (e.g., a rendered version or a list of PHIDs or something), but we could add more keys, and we already have some other transactions which work like this.
Test Plan: Used "transaction.search" to fetch these transaction types, saw type information and metadata.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20507
Summary:
See PHI1229. An install has a somewhat duct-taped registration flow which can dump users on the "Wait for Approval" screen without clear guidance. The desired guidance is something like "this is totally normal, just wait a bit for a bot to approve you".
Adding guidance here is generally reasonable and consistent with the intent of this feature.
Test Plan: {F6426583}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: kylec
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20492
Summary: Depends on D20519. Ref T13283. See PHI1202. Add a new rule which triggers when the current/most-recent transaction group includes a "content" or "publish" transaction, which means the published document content has changed.
Test Plan:
- Wrote a Herald rule using this field.
- Created a document (rule matched).
- Edited a document (rule matched).
- Edited a document, saving as a draft (no match).
- Edited a draft, updating it (no match).
- Published a draft docuemnt (rule matched).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13283
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20520
Summary:
Depends on D20518. Ref T13283. When you use the "Test Console" in Herald to test rules, pass the most recent group of transactions to the Adapter.
This will make it easier to test rules that depend on edit state, since you can make the type of edit you're trying to test and then use the Test Console to actually test if it matches in the way you expect.
The transactions we select may not be exactly the group of transactions that most recently applied. For example, if you make edits A, B, and C in rapid succession and then run the Test Console on the object, it may select "A + B + C" as a transaction group. But we'll show you what we selected and this is basically sane/reasonable and should be fine.
(Eventually, we could include a separate "transaction group ID" on transactions if we want to get this selection to match exactly.)
Test Plan: Ran the Test Console on various objects, saw sensible transaction lists in the transcripts.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13283
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20519
Summary:
Ref T13283. Since D14575, we already pass applied transactions to Herald, but they exist only as a backwards compatibility layer and have no upstream callsites.
Save the applied transaction PHIDs as part of the object transcript, and show them in the UI.
Test Plan:
- Viewed a modern transcript, saw a list of transactions.
- Viewed an older transcript, saw nothing (since there were no transactions in the transcript).
{F6456431}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13283
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20518
Summary:
Depends on D20516. See PHI1247. In D20331, I made the crumbs on workboards point at ancestor workboards.
However, this isn't a great destination if an ancestor doesn't actually have a workboard. In this case, point at the normal profile URI instead.
Test Plan:
- Viewed a milestone workboard with a parent that had no workboard. Saw a profile link instead of a workboard link (new behavior).
- Viewed a milestone workboard with a parent that also had a workboard. Saw a workboard link (existing old behavior still works).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20517
Summary:
Ref T13276. Previously, these edges were added directly with an `EdgeEditor`, so they did not generate transaction stories.
Now, they're added properly, but they aren't terribly useful in feed/mail. Hide them in those contexts, like we already do with other types of similar edges.
Test Plan: Will verify behavior on `secure`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13276
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20491
Summary:
See PHI1209. When a task is in "Hard Lock" mode, it's still possible to apply some changes to it. Notably:
- You can subscribe/unsubscribe.
- You can mention it on another object.
- You can add a relationship from some other object to it (e.g., select it as a "Parent Task" for some other task).
Currently, these types of edits will show a "Lock Overridden" timeline emblem icon. However, they should not: you didn't override a lock to make these changes, they just bypass locks.
For now, special case these cases (self subscribe/unsubscribe + inverse edge edits) so they don't get the little icon, since I think this list is exhaustive today.
Some day we should modularize this, but we'd need code like this anyway (since TYPE_SUBSCRIBE is not modular yet), and this seems unlikely to cause problems even if it's a bit rough.
Test Plan:
- Hard-locked a task.
- Subscribed/unsubscribed, mentioned, relationship'd it as a non-author. No timeline emblems.
- Soft-locked a task.
- Subscribed/unsubscribed, mentioned, relationship'd it, no timeline emblems.
- Clicked "Edit", answered "yes" to the override prompt, edited it. Got a timeline emblem.
- Added some comments and stuff to a normal non-locked task, no emblems.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20513
Summary:
See PHI1247. If you remove the Workboard from a project profile menu, then navigate to the URI, we currently fatal when trying to select the "Workboard" item.
Instead, only try to select the item if some matching item is present.
Test Plan:
- Disabled the workboard on a project, navigated to `/board/`, got a sensible page with no navigation item selected instead of a fatal.
- Viewed a normal workboard, saw the correct selection.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20516
Summary: Ref PHI1166. I'm documenting our dependencies, and we have approximately 5,000 lines of external code to support WePay as a Phortune provider. We don't use it, I'm almost certain it doesn't work, and we have no plans to use it in the near future. If we did pursue it, I'd probably just wrap the API in a 100-line `WePayFuture` anyway since 5K lines of dependencies to make a couple method calls is ridiculous.
Test Plan: Grepped for `wepay`, `httpful`, `restful`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: aurelijus
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20521
Summary: Ref T13276. This edge is pointed the wrong way. Point it the right way.
Test Plan: Will verify production works better.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13276
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20490
Summary: Depends on D20474. Ref T13272. Provide an easy way to rearrange tabs on a tab panel, by moving them left or right from the context menu.
Test Plan: Moved tabs left and right. Tried to move them off the end of the tab list, no luck.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20475
Summary:
Depends on D20473. Ref T13272. Fixes T7216. If you want to tweak the query a panel uses, you currently have to complete 7 Great Labors.
Instead, add a "Customize Query" action which lets you update the query inline.
Test Plan: {F6402171}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272, T7216
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20474
Summary:
Depends on D20469. Ref T13276. See PHI1159. See PHI953. See PHI901.
Allow Herald to detect when "arc land" would (or did) warn users about failed or ongoing builds. This respects the "Warn on Landing" build plan behavior.
To accomplish this:
- When we close a revision, set a "wrong build state" flag if it lands in the wrong build state.
- If the revision is closed when we hit Herald, look for the flag.
- If not (common for push rules, can happen for commit rules if we race against the revision update worker), hit Harbormaster ourselves and check the current state.
Test Plan:
- Wrote a "Require Green" rule.
- Ran it against various commits with various build states (good, not good).
- Fiddled with "Warn on Landing" and saw the effect in rule evaluation.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13276
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20470
Summary:
Depends on D20468. Ref T13276. See PHI1008.
When a commit or revision "reverts <hash>", and that's the hash of a commit which has a revision, also write a "reverts" edge to the revision.
Test Plan:
Created "reverts X" objects for:
- a revision;
- a commit;
- a commit with a revision (both got marked properly).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13276
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20469
Summary:
Depends on D20467. Ref T13277. Currently, the "MessageParserWorker" writes this property on commits, then Herald and Audit both read it.
Make them share code so this property has one writer and one reader. This property isn't great, but at least now the badness is hidden.
Currently, we can't just use edges because they may not have been written yet. I am likely to just do this, soon:
- Just write the edges (in "MessageParserWorker").
- Hide the edges from mail.
However, we'll sort-of lose the "revisionMatchData" explanation thing if I do that. Maybe this is fine? But when commits match because hashes match, it legitimately isn't obvious.
For now, just reduce the amount of harm/badness here.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/repository reparse --publish ...`.
- Ran a Herald "Audit" rule using the "Accepted Differential revision" field.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20468
Summary: See PHI1220. Ref T13272. I accidentally left the ability to set a query limit behind when updating this.
Test Plan: Edited a query panel, set/removed the limit, tried to set an invalid limit.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20472
Summary:
Depends on D20472. Ref T13272. Currently, when you edit a panel from a dashboard, we try to add the panel to the dashboard. This always works since dashboards no longer enforce panel uniqueness, and you can end up with duplicate panels.
Instead, only add panels if we're creating them.
Test Plan:
- Edited an existing panel, no duplication.
- Created a new panel, saw it added to the dashboard.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20473
Summary:
If you edit an auth message in Auth > Customize Messages, then click "Show Details" in the transaction record, the resulting dialog uses the object's handle's URI to generate a "cancel" button.
Since these handles currently have no URI, the dialog currently has no cancel/done button to close it.
Test Plan: Edited an auth message, clicked "Show Details", was now able to click "Done" to close the dialog.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20471
Summary:
See PHI985. I think we pretty much need to start applying language-specific rules, but we can apply at least one more relatively language-agnostic rule: don't match lines which are indented 3+ levels.
In C++, we may have symbols like this:
```
class X {
public:
int m() { ... }
}
```
..but I believe no mainstream language puts symbol definitions 3+ levels deep.
Also clean up some of the tab handling very slightly.
Test Plan: Tests pass, looked at some C++ code and got slightly better (but still not great) matches.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20479
Summary:
See PHI1218. When rendering "A vs B", we currently show the properties of diff A without modification.
Instead, take properties from the same place we're taking change details.
See T12664 for a followup.
Test Plan:
- In diff A, removed "+x" from a file.
- In diff B, changed the file but did not remove "+x" from it.
- Diffed B vs A.
- Before change: UI incorrectly shows "+x" removed (both sides incorrect, just showing the change from diff A).
- After change: UI shows 100644 -> null, which is half right.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20478
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/unable-to-reload-object-that-hasnt-been-loaded/2677>.
When editing "Config" objects, they currently get a PHID set outside of the TransactionEditor. They probably should not, but fixing that is likely an involved change.
This causes us to incorrectly fail to detect `$is_new` correctly and try to `reload()` and object with no ID.
To work around this, test for new objects with `getID()` instead of `getPHID()`.
Test Plan: Edited any config value with the web UI.
Reviewers: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20482
Summary:
Depends on D20466. Ref T13277. Currently:
- The "Owners" worker writes ownership relationships (e.g., commit X affects package Y, because it touches a path in package Y) -- these are just edges.
- It also triggers audits.
- Then it queues a "Herald" worker.
- This formally publishes the commit and triggers Herald.
These aren't really separate steps and can happen more easily in one shot. Merge them.
Test Plan:
- Ran `bin/repository reparse --publish` to republish various commits, got sensible behavior.
- Grepped for "IMPORTED_OWNERS", "IMPORTED_HERALD", "--herald", "--owners", and "--force-local" flags.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20467
Summary:
Depends on D20465. Ref T13277. Currently, when a commit is unpublished, we put a single line about it on the "Edit Commit" page. This is pretty much impossible to find.
Move it to the main page. This treatment is more big/bold than I'd probably like to end up, but we should probably overshoot on the explanatory text until users get used to this behavior.
Also, allow searching for only published / unpublished commits.
Test Plan: {F6395705}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20466
Summary:
Depends on D20464. Ref T13277. Broadly:
- Move all the "should publish X" and "why aren't we publishing X" stuff to a separate class (`PhabricatorRepositoryPublisher`).
- Rename things to be more consistent with modern terminology ("Publish", "Permanent Refs").
Test Plan:
This could use some trial-by-fire on `secure`, but:
- Grepped for all symbols.
- Viewed various commits.
- Reparsed commits.
- Here's a commit with an explanation:
{F6394569}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20465
Summary: Depends on D20463. Ref T13277. This flag was added some time before 2015 and I don't think I've ever used it. Just get rid of it.
Test Plan: Grepped for `force-autoclose`, `forceAutoclose`, `AUTOCLOSE_FORCED`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20464
Summary:
Depends on D20462. Ref T13276. Currently, the "Message" parser also updates related tasks and revisions when a commit is published.
For PHI1165, which ran into a race with message parsing, I originally believed we needed to separate this logic and lock + yield to avoid the race. D20462 provides what is probably a better approach for avoiding the race.
Still, I think separating these "update related revisions" and "updated related tasks" chunks into separate workers is a net improvement. There may still be some value in doing lock + yield in the future to deal with other issues, and when we occasionally run into problems with pulling a diff out of the repository to update the revision (usually because the diff is too big) this isolates the problem better and allows the commit to import.
I think the only thing to watch out for here is that Herald may now run before the revision and commit are attached to one another. This is fine for all current Herald rules, we just need to be mindful in implementing new rules.
Test Plan: Used `bin/repository reparse --message` on various commits, including commits that close revisions and close tasks.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13276
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20463
Summary:
Depends on D20461. Ref T13276. Ref T13054.
Currently, we acquire the transaction read lock after populating "old values" in transactions and filtering transactions with no effect.
This isn't early enough to prevent all weird chaotic races: if two processes try to apply a "close revision" transaction at the same time, this can happen:
```
PROCESS A PROCESS B
Old Value = Open Old Value = Open
Transaction OK: Yes Transaction OK: Yes
Acquire Read Lock Acquire Read Lock
Got Read Lock! Wait...
Apply Transactions Wait...
New Value = Closed Wait...
Release Lock Wait...
Got Read Lock!
Apply Transactions
New Value = Closed
Release Lock
```
That's not great: both processes apply an "Open -> Closed" transaction since this was a valid transaction from the viewpoint of each process when it did the checks.
We actually want this:
```
PROCESS A PROCESS B
Acquire Read Lock Acquire Read Lock
Got Read Lock! Wait...
Old Value = Open Wait...
Transaction OK: Yes Wait...
Apply Transactions Wait...
New Value = Closed Wait...
Release Lock Wait...
Got Read Lock!
>>> Old Value = Closed
>>> Transaction Has No Effect!
>>> Do Nothing / Abort
Release Lock
```
Move the "lock" part up so we do that.
This may cause some kind of weird second-order effects, but T13054 went through pretty cleanly and we have to do this to get correct behavior, so we can survive those if/when they arise.
Test Plan:
- Added a `sleep(10)` before the lock.
- Ran `bin/repository message --reparse X` in two console windows, where X is a commit that closes revision Y and Y is open.
- Before patch: both windows closed the revision and added duplicate transactions.
- After patch: only one of the processes had an effect.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: jmeador
Maniphest Tasks: T13276, T13054
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20462
Summary: Depends on D20459. Ref T13276. I'll file a followup to actually destroy the table.
Test Plan:
- Grepped for `TABLE_COMMIT`.
- Ran `bin/storage upgrade -f`, got a clean bill of health.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13276
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20461
Summary:
Depends on D20458. Ref T13276. Although I'm not thrilled about "needCommitPHIDs()", it has a few callers, including custom fields. Allow "need + attach + get" to survive for now since they're reasonably modern, at least.
However, use edges instead of "TABLE_COMMIT" and require `need...()` + `get...()`, removing the direct `load...()`.
Also remove `RevisionQuery->withCommitPHIDs(...)`, which has no callers.
Test Plan:
- Grepped for `loadCommitPHIDs` (only two hits, the private `RevisionQuery` method).
- Called "differential.getrevision", got commits.
- Viewed a revision, saw "Commits: ...".
- Grepped for `withCommitPHIDs()`, no callers on `RevisionQuery` (some other query classes have methods with this name).
- Called "differential.query", got commits.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13276
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20459
Summary: Depends on D20457. Ref T13276. Kill all remaining callers to this method and delete it.
Test Plan:
- Grepped for `loadIDsByCommitPHIDs`.
- Viewed blame again to make sure I didn't break it.
- Viewed "History" view for commits with revisions.
- Viewed "Graph" view for commits with revisions.
- Viewed "Merged Commits" table for commits with revisions.
- Viewed "Compare" table for commits with revisions.
- Viewed "Repository" main page history table for commits with revisions.
- Grepped for `linkRevision`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13276
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20458
Summary:
Ref T13276. Differential has a pre-edge "TABLE_COMMIT" with about a half-dozen weird callers I'd like to get rid of.
Move blame to use edges instead. (Bonus: this makes blame respect edge edits in the UI.)
Since there are some more callers to clean up this code may move into some "RelatedObjectQueryThing" class or something, but I'm taking it one step at a time for now.
Test Plan: {F6394106}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13276
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20457
Summary:
Depends on D20445. Ref T13279. I'm not sure what the class tree of functions actually looks like, and I suspect it isn't really a tree, so I'm hesitant to start subclassing. Instead, try adding some `isSomethingSomething()` methods.
We have some different types of functions:
# Some functions can be evaluated anywhere, like "constant(3)", which always evaluates to 3.
# Some functions can't be evaluated anywhere, but have values everywhere in some domain. This is most interesting functions, like "number of open tasks". These functions also usually have a distinct set of interesting points, and are constant between those points (any count of anything, like "open points in project" or "tasks closed by alice", etc).
# Some functions can be evaluated almost nowhere and have only discrete values. This is most of the data we actually store, which is just "+1" when a task is opened and "-1" when a task is closed.
Soon, I'd like to be able to show ("all tasks" - "open tasks") and draw a chart of closed tasks. This is somewhat tricky because the two datasets are of the second class of function (straight lines connecting dots) but their "interesting" x values won't be the same (users don't open and close tasks every second, or at the same time).
The "subtract X Y" function will need to be able to know that `subtract "all tasks" 3` and `subtract "all tasks" "closed tasks"` evaluate slightly differently.
To make this worse, the data we actually //store// is of the third class of function (just the "derivative" of the line chart), then we accumulate it in the application after we pull it out of the database. So the code will need to know that `subtract "derivative of all tasks" "derivative of closed tasks"` is meaningless, or the UI needs to make that clear, or it needs to interpret it to mean "accumulate the derivative into a line first".
Anyway, I'll sort that out in future changes. For now, simplify the easy case of functions in class (1), where they're just actual functions.
Add "shift(function, number)" and "scale(function, number)". These are probably like "mul" and "add" but they can't take two functions -- the second value must always be a constant. Maybe these will go away in the future and become `add(function, constant(3))` or something?
Test Plan: {F6382885}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20446
Summary:
Depends on D20444. Ref T13279. Instead of ad-hoc parsing and messages, formalize chart function arguments.
Also, add a whole lot of extra type checking.
Test Plan: Built and charted various functions with various valid and invalid argument lists, got sensible-seeming errors and results.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20445
Summary:
See PHI1213. If we don't have identities for "revision X closed by commit Y" stories, just do the plain non-attribution rendering rather than trying to fall back. Falling back won't work since we don't load the data, which should be OK now since identities seem like they're in generally good shape.
(We could probably just throw out the fallback behavior instead, but we can always clean things up later.)
Test Plan: Forced no commit identity on a revision, loaded it, saw reasonable story rendering.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20460
Summary:
Ref T13266. See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/notification-page-throws-unrecoverable-fatal-error/2651/>.
The "notifications" query currently uses offset paging for no apparent reason (just a legacy issue?), so some of the paging code is only reachable internally.
- Stop it from using offset paging, since modern cursor paging is fine here (and Feed has used cursor paging for a long time).
- Fix the non-offset paging to work like Feed.
Also:
- Remove a couple of stub methods with no callsites after cursor refactoring.
Test Plan:
- Set things up so I had more than 100 notifications and some in the first 100 were policy filtered, to reproduce the issue (I just made `FeedStory` return `NO_ONE` as a visibility policy).
- Applied the patch, notifications now page cleanly.
- Verified that "Next Page" took me to the right place in the result list.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: hskiba
Maniphest Tasks: T13266
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20455
Summary:
Ref T13280. In D20421, I changed our observe strategy to `git fetch <uri>` in all cases.
This doesn't work in an ancient, non-bare repository if `master` is checked out and `master` is also fetch: `git` refuses to overwrite the local ref unless we pass `--update-head-ok`. Pass this flag.
Also, remove some code which examines branches and tags in a special way for non-bare working copies. The old `git fetch <origin>` code without explicit revsets meant that `refs/remotes/orgin/heads/xyz` got updated instead of `refs/heads/xyz`. We now update our local refs in all cases (bare and non-bare) so we can throw away this special casing.
Test Plan:
- Replaced a modern bare working copy with a non-bare working copy by explicitly using `git clone` without `--bare`.
- Ran `bin/repository update`, hit the `--update-head-ok` error. Applied the patch, got a clean update.
- Used the "repository.branchquery" API method...
- ...with "contains" to trigger the "git branch" case. Got identical results after removing the special casing.
- ...without "contains" to trigger the "low level ref" case. Got identical results after removing the special casing.
- Grepped for `isWorkingCopyBare()`. The only remaining callsites deal with hook paths, and genuinely need to be specialized.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13280
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20450
Summary:
Ref T13279. Charting changes alter how the "line-chart" behavior works, but the "Burnup Chart" still relies on the old behavior.
Although I'm intending to remove "Maniphest > Reports" once Facts is a minimally sufficient replacement, copy this behavior to keep it working until we're ready to pull the trigger.
Also fix a leftover typo from D20435.
Test Plan: Viewed a legacy Maniphest burnup rate report.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20449
Summary: This always bugs me when I'm going through `secure` looking for the spiciest macros.
Test Plan: Forced a date to be null, saw reasonable text.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20453
Summary:
Depends on D20443. Ref T13279. This is probably not terribly useful on its own, but is mostly a function which takes another function as an argument, and a step toward more useful functions like arithmetic and drawing a picture of an owl.
The only structural change here is that functions now read data parameters (domain, sample limit) using a more tailored "ChartDataQuery" instead of reading the actual axis. Mostly, I want a more cohesive representation of query state that can be easily passed to sub-functions, as here.
Test Plan: {F6382432}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20444
Summary:
Depends on D20442. Ref T13279. Add basic support for drawing chart functions that are not based on Facts first-party ETL datasets. Some general goals:
- This might be useful to draw a line like "goal" or "profitability".
- This might be useful to pull data from an external source.
- For composable functions like "add" or "subtract", which are useful in manipulating ETL datasets, these value functions will make testing easier.
Test Plan:
Added a `constant(256)` function:
{F6382408}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20443
Summary:
Depends on D20441. Ref T13279. Currently, we pull all the data, then decide what the X-axis should look like.
Since users will reasonably want to do stuff like "show me march-april 2018" in the future, we need to move toward flipping this around so that we can support cases where the domain is specified by the user.
For actual chart functions (like "constant(3)" or "cos(x)"), we must also know the domain before we pull data, since there are an infinite number of places where we can evaluate the function "constant(3)".
See note in T13279 about continunity.
Test Plan: {F6382356}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20442
Summary:
Depends on D20440. Ref T13279. Create a class to represent a chartable function: something we can get some data points out of.
Then, make the chart chart two functions.
For now, the only supported function is "fact(key)", which pulls data from the Facts ETL pipeline, identified by "key", and takes no other arguments.
In future changes, I plan to support things like "fact(tasks.open.project, PHID-PROJ-xyz)", "constant(1000)" (e.g. to draw a goal line), "sum(fact(...), fact(...))" (to combine data from several projects), and so on.
The UI may not expose this level of power for a while (or maybe ever) but until we get close enough to the UI that these features are a ton of extra work I'm going to try to keep things fairly flexible/modular.
Test Plan: {F6382286}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20441
Summary:
Depends on D20439. Ref T13279. Some day, charts will probably need to reload themselves or do a bunch of defer/request-shaping magic when they're on a dashboard with 900 other charts.
Give the controller separate "HTML placeholder" and "actual data" modes, and make the placeholder fetch the data in a separate request.
Then, make the chart redraw if you resize the window instead of staying at whatever size it started as.
Test Plan:
- Loaded a chart, saw it load data asynchronously.
- Resized the window, saw the chart resize.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20440
Summary:
Ref T13279. I think I'm going to fling some stuff at the wall for a bit here and hope most of it sticks, so this series of changes may not be terribly cohesive or focused. Here:
The range of the chart is locked to "[0, 105% of max]". This is trying to make a pleasing extra margin above the maximum value, but currently just breaks charts with negative values. Later:
- I'll probably let users customize this.
- We should likely select 0 as the automatic minimum for charts with no negative values.
- For charts with positive values, it would be nice to automatically pick a pleasantly round number (25, 100, 1000) as a maximum by default.
We don't have any storage for charts yet. Add some. This works like queries, where every possible configuration gets a short URL slug. Nothing writes or reads this yet.
Rename `fn()` to `css_function()`. This builds CSS functions for D3. The JS is likely to get substantial structural rewrites later on, `fn()` was just particularly offensive.
Test Plan: Viewed a fact series with negative values. Ran `bin/storage upgrade`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: yelirekim, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13279
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20438
Summary:
Depends on D20434. Fixes T5963. Broadly, the issue here is that when:
- You create a new, empty repository.
- Then, you work on some branch other than `master`, without ever creating `master`.
...you get a warning on `git clone`:
> warning: remote HEAD refers to nonexistent ref, unable to checkout
To fix this, point the symbolic-ref HEAD at `refs/heads/<default-branch>` after installing commit hooks.
This fixes the warning, and also means that `git clone` will check out the repository default branch by default, which is nice.
There are a few caveats about this behavior (see T5963 for discussion) but nothing too substantial.
The only real issue is that Git prevents deletion of the default branch without a config setting. Just set that settting.
Test Plan:
See T5963.
In a repository, set `HEAD` to point somewhere invalid. Ran `bin/repository update ...`. Saw HEAD pointed back at the repository default branch.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T5963
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20435
Summary:
Depends on D20433. Ref T13277. Since "Autoclose" no longer exists, update the documentation.
Currently, this documentation focuses a lot on troubleshooting because users historically had a lot of trouble with figuring out why things were or were not autoclosing. I haven't seen any real confusion about this in years, so I suspect we may have improved the import pipeline and/or UI to make this less of a problem.
It's also possible that this document "fixed" the problem, but usually I expect a documentation fix to not affect the frequency of reports, just make them easier to resolve, so I doubt it.
If unclear things remain //and// documentation really did fix it, maybe we can fix the issues. Or we can just put the troubleshooting documentation back.
Test Plan: Read documentation.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20434
Summary:
Depends on D20432. Ref T13277. Fixes T12967. Removes some "Track Only" hints and warns that the feature is deprecated in favor of "Permanent Refs" and "Fetch Only".
(This "fixes" T12967 by mooting it.)
Test Plan: Viewed "branches" sectino of the manage UI, edited "braches" section of a repository.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277, T12967
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20433
Summary:
Depends on D20427. Ref T13277. As an optimization, when we discover that a commit which was previously only on a non-permanent ref ("tmp-epriestley-123") is now reachable from a permanent ref ("master"), we currently queue only a new "message" parse step.
This is an optimization because these commits previously got the full treatment (feed, publish, audit, etc) as soon as they were discovered. Now, those steps only happen once a commit is reachable from a permanent ref, so we need to run everything.
Test Plan:
- Pushed local "tmp-123" branch to remote tag "tmp-123".
- Updated repository with "bin/repository update", saw commit import as a "not on any permanent ref" commit, with no herald/audit/etc.
- Merged "tmp-123" tag into "master".
- Pushed new "master".
- Updated repository with "bin/repository refs ... --trace --verbose", saw commit detected as now reachable from a permament ref.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20428
Summary:
Depends on D20426. Ref T13277. The new behavior is to fire Herald only once a commit becomes reachable from a permanent ref (previously, an "Autoclose" branch).
That means that every "Commit" Herald rule implicitly has this field as a condition, and it no longer does anything.
Test Plan: Wrote a Herald rule, saw this as an option in the "Deprecated" section.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20427
Summary:
Depends on D20425. Ref T13277. See PHI1067. There's currently no way to retrieve branch/ref rules over the API, which makes some management operations against a large number of repositories difficult.
Expose these rules to the API.
Test Plan: Called `diffusion.repository.search`, got rules in the result set.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20426
Summary:
Depends on D20424. Ref T13277. Now that the "Actions" panel only has one item ("Publishing"), just move it to the "Basics" panel.
Update the UI to show active/publishing status more clearly and relate them to one another and importing state.
Test Plan: {F6378087}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20425
Summary:
Depends on D20423. Ref T13277. Repositories currently have separate toggles for "Autoclose" and "Publishing".
Merge the "Autoclose" toggle into the "Publishing" toggle. I'm unaware of any valid use case for enabling one but not the other.
(This doesn't fix all the documentation, yet.)
Test Plan: Edited a repository, saw only one publishing option.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20424
Summary:
Depends on D20422. Ref T13277. Currently, "track only", "publish", and "autoclose" are three separate ideas. I'd like to generally merge them into a more natural idea called "permanent refs".
Since "Autoclose" effectively now controls both "autoclose" and "publish", rename it.
This doesn't rename all the methods or internals, and the documentation needs an update, but it renames most of the UI-facing stuff.
(You also can only specify branches as "Permanent Refs" today, but we may let you specify tags and other arbitrary refs in the future.)
Test Plan: Grepped, poked around the UI, saw UI show "Permanent" / "Permanent Refs" more often and "Autoclose" less.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20423
Summary:
Depends on D20421. Ref T13277. I'd generally like to move away from "Track Only".
Some of the use cases for "Track Only" (or adjacent to "Track Only") are better resolved with "Fetch Rules" -- basically, rules to fetch only some subset of refs from the observed remote.
Add configurable "Fetch Rules" for Git repositories. For example, if you only want to fetch `master`, you can now speify:
```
refs/heads/master
```
If you only want to fetch branches and tags, you can use:
```
refs/heads/*
refs/tags/*
```
In theory, this is slightly less powerful in the general case than "Track Only", but gives us better behavior in some cases (e.g., when the remote has 50K random temporary branches). In practice, I think this and a better "Autoclose Only" will let us move away from "Track Only", get default behavior which is better aligned with what users actually expect, and dodge all the "track tags/refs" questions.
Test Plan: Configured repositories with "Fetch Refs" rules, used `bin/repository pull --verbose --trace ...` to run pulls, saw expected pull/fetch behavior.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20422
Summary:
Depends on D20420. Ref T13277. We currently spend substantial effort trying to detect and correct the URL of the "origin" remote in Git repositories.
I believe this is unnecessary, and we can always `git fetch <url> ...` to get the desired result instead of `git muck-with-origin + git fetch origin ...`. We already do this in the more recent parts of the codebase (e.g., intracluster sync) and it works correctly in every case I'm aware of.
Test Plan:
- Grepped for `origin`, ` origin `.
- Ran `bin/repository update ...` to fetch a mirrored repository.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20421
Summary:
Depends on D20418. Ref T13277. Fixes T11314.
Currently, when you push commits to some arbitrary ref or tag (like `refs/pull/123` on GitHub, `refs/tags/phabricator/diff/123` on Phabricator, or `refs/changes/whatever` on Gerrit), we do not "autoclose" related objects. This means that we don't process `Ref T123` to create links to tasks, and don't process `Differential Revision: xyz` to close revisions.
However, we //do// still publish these commits. "Publish" means: trigger audits, publish feed stories, and run Herald rules.
- Stop publishing these commits.
- In the UI, show these commits as "Not Permanent" with a note that they are "Not [on any permanent branch]."
These commits will publish and autoclose if they ever become reachable from an "autoclose" ref (most commonly, if they are later merged to "master").
Test Plan:
- Pushed a commit to `refs/tags/quack`.
- Before: got a feed story.
- After: no feed story, UI shows commit as "Not Permanent".
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277, T11314
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20419
Summary:
Depends on D20381. Ref T8093. This makes minor improvements to the protocol proxy to handle cases where we add, remove, or replace refs and may need to move the "capabilities" section.
Rather than invoking a callback on every ref: parse the whole ref list into a data structure, mutate it if necessary (in a future diff), then dump it back into wire format.
This allows us to shift the capabilities data (which needs to be coupled with the first ref) around if we modify the first ref, and reorder the reflist alphabetically like git does.
When the server has no refs, Git sends no capabilities data. This is easy to emulate, just surprising.
Test Plan:
Tested the cases not covered by D20381:
- Fetching where the fetch actually fetches data.
- `ls-remote` when we hide the first ref (capabilities data properly moves to the first visible ref).
- `ls-remote` when the remote is empty (we just drop the capabilities frame completely).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T8093
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20436
Summary:
Depends on D20380. Ref T8093. When prototypes are enabled, inject a (hopefully?) no-op proxy into the Git wire protocol.
This proxy decodes "git upload-pack" and allows the list of references to be rewritten, in a similar way to how we already proxy the Subversion protocol to rewrite URIs and proxy the Mercurial protocol to distinguish between read and write operations.
The piece we care about comes at the beginning, and looks like this:
```
<frame-length><ref-hash> <ref-name>\0<server-capabilities>\n
<frame-length><ref-hash> <ref-name>\n
<frame-length><ref-hash> <ref-name>\n
...
<0000>
```
We can add, remove, or modify this section to make it appear that the server has different refs than the refs that exist on disk.
Things I have tried:
- `git ls-remote`
- `git ls-remote` where the server hides some refs.
- `git fetch` where the fetch is a no-op.
Things I have not tried:
- `git fetch` where the fetch is not a no-op.
- Tricking things into doing protocol v2. Or: I tried this, I wasn't successful. In v2, additional "\0" tricks are used to hide data in the capabilities, I think?
- `git ls-remote` where we rewrite/hide the first ref in the list, and need to move the capabilities frame elsewhere.
- `git ls-remote` where the server has no refs at all, or we remove every ref.
So the "interesting" piece of this works, but it almost certainly needs some cleanup to survive interaction with the real world.
Test Plan: See above.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T8093
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20381
Summary:
Ref T8093. Support dumping the protocol bytes to a side channel logfile, as a precursor to parsing the protocol and rewriting protocol frames to virtualize refs.
The protocol itself is mostly ASCII text so the raw protocol bytes are pretty comprehensible.
Test Plan:
{F6363221}
{F6363222}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T8093
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20380
Summary: Ref T7667. Also one text fix.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/auth lock`, didn't get a replacement setup issue.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T7667
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20447
Summary:
See PHI1134. Generally, "alice added a dependent revision: ..." isn't a very interesting story. This relationship itself is valuable, but the creation of the relationship is usually pretty obvious from context.
In the specific case of PHI1134, various scripts are racing one another, but I don't think this story is of much value in the general case anyway.
Test Plan: Edited parent/child revisions, no more feed stories.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20437
Summary:
Depends on D20419. Ref T13277. Fixes T8936. Fixes T9383. Fixes T12300. When you push arbitrary refs to Phabricator, the push log currently complains if those refs are not tags or branches.
Upstream Git now features "notes", and there's no reason to prevent writes to arbitrary refs, particularly beause we plan to start using them soon (see T13278).
Allow these writes as affecting raw refs.
Test Plan:
- Pushed an arbitrary ref.
- Pushed some Git notes.
- Wrote a Herald ref rule, saw "ref" in the dropdown.
{F6376492}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13277, T8936, T9383, T12300
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20420
Summary:
Depends on D20416. Ref T13269. See D20329.
If you try to save an "Assign to" rule with no assignee, we currently replace the control with an "InvalidRule" control that isn't editable. We'd prefer to give you an empty field back and let you pick a different value.
Differentiate between "bad record format" (i.e., we can't really do anything with this) and "bad record value" (i.e., everything is structurally fine, you just typed the wrong thing). In the latter case, we still build a properly typed rule for the UI, we just refuse to update storage until you fix the problem.
Test Plan:
First, hit the original issue and got a nicer UI with a more consistent control width (note full-width error):
{F6374205}
Then, applied the rest of the patch and got a normal "fix the issue" form state instead of a dead-end:
{F6374211}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13269
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20417
Summary:
Ref T12164. Ref T13276. Currently, the parsing pipeline copies the author and committer names and PHIDs into the transcaction record as metadata. They are then rendered directly from the metadata.
This makes planned changes to the parsing pipeline (to prevent races when multiple commits matching a single revision are pushed simultaneously) more difficult, and generally won't work with repository identities.
Instead, load the commit and use its identities.
Test Plan: Loaded a revision, saw the same story rendering for a "Closed by commit" story.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13276, T12164
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20418
Summary:
Ref T13269. See D20329. When we switch trigger rule control types, reset the rule value.
Also, pick slightly nicer defaults for status/priority.
Test Plan:
- Created a "Change Status To: X" rule.
- Saved it.
- Edited it.
- Selected "Assign to" for the existing action's dropdown.
- Before: tokenizer filled with nonsense.
- After: tokenizer cleared.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13269
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20416
Summary:
Depends on D20414. Ref T13272. Several minor things here:
- Currently, you can drag panels underneath the invisible "there are no items in this column" div and the "Create Panel / Add Existing Panel" buttons. This is silly; stop it.
- Currently, when viewing a tab panel on a dashboard, you can drag the panels inside it. This is extremely silly. Make "movable" off by default and pass it through the async flow only when we actually need it.
- Make the whole "Add Tab..." virtual tab clickable to open the dropdown. This removes the rare exception/todo combo I added earlier. {key F}
- Add or remove some icons or something.
Test Plan: Moved panels around on dashboards. Tried to drag panels inside tab panels. Added tab. Things were less obviously broken.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20415
Summary:
Depends on D20413. Ref T13272. When you search for stuff, you can "Use Results > Add to Dashboard" to generate a query panel.
This needs some updating after the recent refactoring. All the changes are pretty straightforward. Swaps a giant `<select />` for a tokenizer with a datasource.
Test Plan: Used the "Use Results > Add to Dashboard" flow to create a panel on a dashboard using a query.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20414
Summary:
Depends on D20412. See PHI1147.
- Index the targets of "Add Reviewer", "Add Blocking Reviewer", "Add Auditor", "Add Subscriber", and "Remove Subscriber" Herald rules. My major goal is to get Owners packages. This will also hit projects/users, but we just don't read those edges (for now, at least).
- Add a "Related Herald Rules" panel to Owners Package pages.
- Add a migration to reindex Herald rules for the recent build plan stuff and this, now that such a migration is easy to write.
Test Plan:
Ran migration, verified all rules reindexed.
{F6372695}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20413
Summary:
Depends on D20411. Ref T13272. Dashboards and panels have new indexes (Ferret and usage edges) that need a rebuild.
For large datasets like commits we have the "activity" flow in T11932, but realistically these rebuilds won't take more than a few minutes on any realistic install so we should be able to just queue them up as migrations.
Let migrations insert a job to basically run `bin/search index --type SomeObjectType`, then do that for dashboards and panels.
(I'll do Herald rules in a followup too, but I want to tweak one indexing thing there.)
Test Plan: Ran the migration, ran `bin/phd debug task`, saw everything get indexed with no manual intervention.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20412
Summary:
Ref T7667. On the road to locking the auth config, also clean up some minor UI issues:
* Only show the warning about not Phacility instance auth if the user isn't a manager (see next diff).
* When rendering more than one warning in the guidance, add bullets.
* I didn't like the text in the `auth.config-lock` config setting.
Test Plan: Loaded the page, saw more reasonable-looking guidance: {F6369405}
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T7667
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20400
Summary:
Depends on D20410. Ref T13272. Dashboards/Panels currently use older "ngram" indexing, which is a less-powerful precursor to Ferret. Throw away the ngram index and provide a Ferret index instead. Also:
- Remove the NUX state, which links to the wrong place now and doesn't seem terribly important.
- Add project tags to the search result list.
- Make the "No Tags" tag a little less conspicious.
Test Plan:
- Indexed dashboards and panels.
- Searched for dashboards and panels via SearchEngine using Ferret "query" field.
- Searched for panels via "Add Existing Panel" datasource typeahead.
- Searched for dashboards via "Add Menu Item > Dashboard" on a ProfileMenu via typeahead.
- Viewed dashboard NUX state (no special state, but no more bad link to "/create/").
- Viewed dashboard list, saw project tags.
- Viewed dashboards with no project tags ("No Tags" is now displayed but less visible).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20411
Summary: Depends on D20409. Ref T13272. Before "ProfileMenu", dashboards were installed on specific objects using this table. Installs are now handled via ProfileMenu and this table no longer has any meaningful readers. Remove references to the table and destroy it.
Test Plan: Grepped for `DashboardInstall`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20410
Summary: Depends on D20408. Ref T13272. The actual JS is still a little bit iffy, but this makes the server side "move" operation work correctly by updating it to use the same code as everything else.
Test Plan: Moved panels around on single-column and multi-column dashboards, saw them move to reasonable places and stay there when I reloaded the page.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20409
Summary:
Depends on D20407. Ref T13272. This updates the "add panel" (which has two flavors: "add existing" and "create new") and "remove panel" flows to work with the new duplicate-friendly storage format.
- We now modify panels by "panelKey", not by panel PHID, so one dashboard may have multiple copies of the same panel and we can still figure out what's going on.
- We now work with "contextPHID", not "dashboardID", to make some flows with tab panels (or other nested panels in the future) easier.
The only major remaining flow is the Javascript "move panels around with drag-and-drop" flow.
Test Plan:
- Added panels to a dashboard with "Create New Panel".
- Added panels to a dashboard with "Add Existing Panel".
- Removed panels from a dashboard.
- Added and removed duplicate panels, got a correctly-functioning dashboard that didn't care about duplicates.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20408
Summary:
Depends on D20406. Ref T13272. This gets about half of Dashboards working with the new "duplicate panel friendly" storage format. Followups will fix the write pathways.
Collateral damage here includes:
- Remove the old Dashboard/Panel edge type. We have a new, more general edge type for "container X uses panel Y", and we don't need this edge type for anything else.
- Remove "attachPanels()" from Dashboard. Only rendering actually needs this, and it can just load the panels.
- Remove "attachPanelPHIDs()" from Dashboard. We can look at the panel refs to figure this out.
- Remove "attachProjects()" from Dashboard. Nothing uses this and it's not a very modern approach.
- `getPanelPHIDs()` just looks at the config now.
- Deleted some `LayoutConfig`-related code which is broken/obsolete.
Test Plan:
- Viewed various dashboards which were created before the changes, saw them render correctly.
- Viewed a dashboard with two of the same panel! AMAZING!
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20407
Summary:
Depends on D20405. Ref T13272. Currently, the `PhabricatorDashboardLayoutConfig` class uses a lot of `switch()` statements to define layout modes.
Although I'm not planning to add thousands of new layout modes, this (and upcoming changes) can be made substantially cleaner by using a standard modular approach.
(This doesn't fully remove `PhabricatorDashboardLayoutConfig` yet, but that will happen soon.)
Test Plan: Edited a dashboard, saw the same layout modes as before.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20406
Summary:
Depends on D20402. Ref T13272. Replaces an old-school hard-coded "EditController" with a more modern one.
The actual panel stuff is still using a weird mix of legacy manual `save()` calls, but that's up next.
Test Plan: Created Dashboards, edited all dashboard fields via "Edit Dashboard".
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20403
Summary:
Depends on D20399. Ref T13272. I'm moving toward fixing all the "moving panels around on Dashboards breaks the entire world" problems.
On the way there, modularize Dashboard transactions.
Test Plan:
- Created a new Dashboard.
- Edited all fiedls of a dashboard.
- Archived/restored a dashboard.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20402
Summary:
Depends on D20398. Ref T13272. Fixes T6018. Previously, panels showed "used on dashboards: x, y", but this did not include cases where a panel was used by another container panel (today, a tab panel).
Do edge indexing when a dashboard or panel is saved, then pull the edges on the Panel page so we can provide a full list of uses.
Test Plan: {F6369289}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272, T6018
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20399
Summary:
Depends on D20397. Ref T13272. Similar to the recent "where are Herald rules used" stuff, show which menus Dashboards are installed in.
This is mostly straightforward, except that I pulled some of the Herald logic into a parent class so it could be shared.
Test Plan: {F6369164}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20398
Summary:
Depends on D20396. Ref T13272. Currently, using the dropdowns to edit a tab panel from a dashboard redirects you to the tab panel page.
Instead, redirect back to the context page (usually, a dashboard -- but theoretically a containing tab panel, since you can put tab panels inside tab panels).
Also, fix some JS issues with non-integer panel keys. I've moved panel keys from "0, 1, 2, ..." to having arbitrary keys to make some operations less flimsy/error-prone, but this needs some JS tweaks.
Test Plan: Edited a tab panel from a dashboard, got sent sensibly back to the dashboard.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20397
Summary:
Ref T13272. In edit mode, tab panels now have a dropdown menu. However, this sort of overrlaps with the actual action of clicking the tab to select it.
Separate these into different click targets so that "select tab X" and "open dropdown menu for X" are different operations.
This is more work than it appears because:
- We have an "action icon" already, used when you put a dashboard on a portal/home to create an "Edit" link. It makes sense to attach dropdowns to this, but it has some hard-coded stuff.
- In applications with a "Create <thing>" in the crumbs (like Maniphest), we may use a dropdown menu if there are multiple create forms available. However, this menu renders in a weird way by reading all the properties out of an actual "View" object and building something else.
- The "list of tabs" stuff shares code with different "list of tabs" navigation used by Diffusion and Instances.
..but I think I fixed everything and didn't break anything.
Test Plan:
- Clicked "select tab" and "open dropdown menu" as separate actions.
- Viewed Diffusion, Maniphest with multiple create forms, Instances.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20396
Summary:
Ref T13276. This was introduced in D2586 to power a "trigger audits when the committed change does not match the reviewed change" feature. It was removed without ceremony in D15939. Broadly, rebases mean that this sort of feature can't really work like this and this approach is inherently unreliable; see also T182.
This property no longer has readers, and is unlikely to get any in the future since my planned pathway for "committed code must match reviewed code, modulo an automated rebase" is automating the rebase via "Land Revision", not comparing the diff text.
Remove this to simplify the flow of data here so that things in T13276 can be fixed more easily.
Test Plan: Grepped for `vsDiff`, no hits.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13276
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20395
Summary:
Ref T7667. Adds new flows `bin/auth lock` and `bin/auth unlock` to prevent compromised administrator accounts from doing additional damage by altering the authentication provider configuration.
Note that this currently doesn't actually do anything because we aren't checking this config key in any of the edit controllers yet.
Test Plan: Ran `lock` and `unlock`, checked for correct DB state, observed expected setup warning.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T7667
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20394
Summary:
Ref T13275. Add portals to the search index so that:
- they show up in fulltext global search; and
- the typeahead actually uses an index.
Also make them taggable with projects as an organizational aid.
Test Plan: Indexed portals with `bin/serach index`, searched for a portal with "Query", with fulltext search in main menu, with typehead on "Install Dashboard...", changed the name of a portal and searched again to check that the index updates properly.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13275
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20389
Summary: Ref T13269. Same as D20379 with the polarity reversed.
Test Plan: Added some triggers, removed some projects, observed expected results.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T13269
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20390
Summary: Ref T13269. This is mostly copying code from the similar Herald implementation. Note that the drop effect preview always renders because we don't have the infrastructure to compare lists of edge targets.
Test Plan: Created some triggers, dragged some tasks around, checked that tasks that already had project membership didn't write additional edges.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T13269
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20379
Summary:
See PHI1175. An install would like to trigger some reminders/guidance if users don't link revisions to JIRA issues.
Expose "JIRA Issue URIs" as a field so Herald can act on the presence or absence of issues.
I'm exposing "JIRA Issue URIs", not a field like "[ Has Jira Issue ][ is true ]", since it's a bit more flexible: you can use a regexp to test against particular `PROJ-123` project prefixes in JIRA, for example.
Test Plan: {F6367696}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20386
Summary:
Depends on D20383. Ref T13272. Fixes T12363. See PHI997. This gets the edit flows for tab panels functional again. They aren't //nice//, and a lot of the workflows are fairly janky: for example, most of them end up with you on the tab panel's page, which isn't useful if you started on a dashboard page.
However, these flows were extremely janky before anyway (see T12363) and I suspect this is a net improvement even though it's a bit of a mess. I anticipate cleaning this up bit-by-bit in future diffs.
Test Plan: {F6366372}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272, T12363
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20384
Summary: Depends on D20384. Ref T13275. A bunch of this code got converted but I missed some callsites that aren't reached directly from the menu.
Test Plan:
- Visited each controller, saw actual pages instead of menu construction fatals.
- Grepped for `getProfileMenu()`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13275
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20385
Summary: Depends on D20377. Ref T13272. In D20372, I temporarily removed the controls for actually editing Query panels. Restore them.
Test Plan:
- Viewed existing Query panels, saw them working like they did before.
- Created and edited Query panels.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20382
Summary:
Depends on D20376. Ref T8033. It's possible to put a bunch of secret panels on a public dashboard, and not obvious that the dashboard won't be very useful.
This was more of an issue long ago (when the dashboard broke or all the panels completely vanished or something?). Nowadays, the panels render "You don't have permission to view this" so it's likely easy to explain/fix. Still, we can warn about this.
But, for now, don't, since a lot of this works better now and it's not really clear that this is particularly valuable. We can revisit this after all the connected changes have more of a chance to settle.
Test Plan:
(Earlier behavior, not how things look in the final version.)
{F6335008}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T8033
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20377
Summary:
Depends on D20374. Panels may not be visible if they are restricted (no permission) or if they are invalid (e.g., the panel was deleted).
Render these as two separate states instead of one big combined state.
Test Plan: {F6334756}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20376
Summary:
Depends on D20373. Ref T13272. When you put Dashboards in Favorites, the render without a navigation menu, which is kind of weird.
Instead, make Favorites display a navigation menu. This effectively turns it into a weird cross between the home page and a portal, but so be it.
Also change the icon from "star" to "bookmark" since I think that a clearer hint about how it works.
Test Plan: Viewed dashboards in favorites, got a navigation menu. Edited items from portals, home, favorites.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20374
Summary:
Depends on D20372. Ref T13272.
- There's a very heavy dropshadow on panels right now that looks out of place. Reduce it a bit.
- Panels currently have unlabeled pencil and trash icons. Turn this into a menu. I'm likely planning to add options like "Change Query..." to this menu to make managing some types of panels easier.
Test Plan: {F6332838}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20373
Summary:
Depends on D20371. Ref T13272. Dashboard panels use CustomField to specify editable panel behavior. This is an older approach which was largely or entirely obsoleted by EditEngine.
Throw away all the CustomField edit stuff. Convert the "text" panel to EditEngine to prove this at least mostly works.
This breaks "query" panels and "tab" panels (they'll still work fine, but they can't be meaningfully edited). I'll restore those in a future change.
Test Plan: Created and edited a "text" panel.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20372
Summary:
Depends on D20370. Ref T13272. This tries to get panel editing fully on the newer "Modular Transactions" + "EditEngine" flow.
This breaks tab panels a bit, but I'll fix that in a followup. And they weren't exactly in great shape before.
Also makes the flow prettier. :3
Test Plan: {F6332746}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20371
Summary: Depends on D20369. Ref T13272. Move toward a world where we can edit panels with just one controller, instead of separate "Edit" and "Editpro" controllers.
Test Plan: Created and edited panels. This will get vetted more thoroughly after additional changes.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20370
Summary:
Depends on D20368. Ref T13272. Dashboards have a lot of controllers, try to organize them a little better.
Note "EditController" vs "EditproController". Yikes.
Test Plan: Loaded dashboards. No code changes.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20369
Summary:
Depends on D20367. Ref T13272. When an edit action is disabled, we add "workflow" so that the "You can't do this" message renders in a dialog instead of a separate page.
These actions are implemented in a nonstandard way; standardize them.
Test Plan: Clicked both actions as a user who could take them (got normal behavior); and as a user who could not (got permissions dialog errors).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20368
Summary:
Depends on D20364. Ref T13272. When you create a dashboard, we currently give you a modal choice between an empty dashboard and a "simple template" dashboard.
Remove this choice, and create an empty dashboard in all cases instead.
I think this template dashboard flow isn't terribly useful, and is partly covering over other deficiencies in the workflow. I'm fixing many of those and suspect we can get away without this now. Users on this flow also may not really know what they want. This also contributes to having a lot of extra unmoored panels floating around.
If we did rebuild this, I'd like to address more specific use cases and probably build it as "Add a Template Panel..." or similar, as an action you can use to quickly update an existing workboard. This would be a lot more flexible than create-a-whole-template-board.
Test Plan: Created a new board, no more "template: yes or no?" gate.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20367
Summary:
Depends on D20362. Ref T13272. Currently, Dashboards have an "Install Dashboard" flow which is pretty janky and only allows you to install things to the home page.
Instead, allow users to install things to any valid target (home, favorites, portals, projects). This also provides URIs like `dashboard/install/1/home/personal/` which allow you to link users to an "install a dashboard" page; this may or may not get used.
Test Plan: Installed dashboards on home, favorites, projects, and portals.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20364
Summary:
Depends on D20361. Ref T13272. Currently, Dashboards have three separate modes: view, arrange, manage.
With the advent of Portals, I think we can simplify this, and make the dashboard view a combined view/edit/manage page. To view it in a cleaner standalone way, you can add it to a portal/home/project. I'll also improve the "Install" workflow.
Test Plan:
Viewed a dashboard page, clicked through all the actions, grepped for affected URIs.
{F6327027}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20362
Summary:
Ref T13269. Workboard triggers can now reassign tasks on column drop. Also sprinkles some `setViewer()` calls in places that needed them.
This mostly works, but a few issues:
* To set the owner to unassigned, you must explicitly put the "No Owner" token in the typeahead. Maybe this should just figure out you've put nothing in that field and set it for you?
* I'm pretty sure this was already broken, but if you change the rule type from a tokenizer to a different type, the default for the field doesn't populate correctly: {F6312227}
Also adds a new hook for trigger rules: `getValueForField($value)` which allows you to transform a value stored in the DB into a form suitable for setting on a form control.
Test Plan: Dragged tasks between columns and observed new owners as expected. Didn't try to get fancy to assign tasks to deleted users, users that the viewer can't see, bot users, etc etc. I'm relying on the underlying transaction to hopefully do the right thing.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Maniphest Tasks: T13269
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20329
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/call-to-undefined-method-phuipagerview-gethasmoreresults-in-2019-week-13/2586/>.
A small number of queries (including "Notifications" and (global) "Search") use offset-based pagers which have a slightly different API `PHUIPagerView` instead of `AphrontCursorPagerView`. This leads to a fatal in the new code for the "View All Results" buttons.
To fix this, just do an `instanceof` test. Some day we can unify the pagers.
Test Plan: Added a notifications panel, rendered it, saw it work instead of fataling on "getHasMoreResults()". Also rendered some normal panels.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20366
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/non-functional-actions-menu-on-live-phame-views/2593>. Several layers here:
The "Actions" button is broken because a menu behavior is failing, since we aren't rendering the menu.
When a behavior fails to initialize, catch and log the exception and continue. Previously, we stopped initializing behaviors if any failed, but behaviors are usually independent and continuing with an explicit exception seems reasonable.
Give "JX.log()" some "sprintf()" semantics to make logging the behavior failure easier. We can probably afford these extra 200 bytes now in 2019.
This fixes the button and gives us explicit errors in the log. So far, so good.
Then, when a page won't render chrome, don't try to render the main menu. This fixes the actual errors (we no longer try to initialize menu behaviors for nodes which don't exist).
Completely hide the "Actions" and "Comment" flows if the viewer isn't logged in. Although this isn't completely consistent with other applications, I think it's more appropriate for Phame. In applications like Maniphest, we show a full set of controls (but disable them) so that users who are not currently logged in have a clear path to interact with the content, under the assumption that this is a relatively common workflow. This is probably less common for Phame, where we expect most anonymous viewers not to log in or interact.
Finally, parametrize a one-off border color and add a border under the crumbs at the top of the page.
Test Plan:
- Viewed a "Live" Phame blog post page, clicked "Actions", got a dropdown.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20378
Summary:
Depends on D20360. Ref T13275. This makes the "Dashboards" application start on a Drydock-like console page where you pick portals, dashboards, or panels.
Probably the "Dashboards" application should either be renamed to "IntelliknowledgePro" or Portals should be split off into a separate application eventually, but let's see how things go like this for now, since restructuring probably breaks some URIs at least a little bit so I'd like more confidence that we're headed in the right direction before we do it.
Test Plan:
- Visited Dashboards via typeahead, got options for Dashboards/Portals/Panels.
- Visited Portals pages, got simplified crumbs.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13275
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20361
Summary:
Depends on D20359. Fixes T12098. When you add a new "Form" item and pick "Create Revision", you currently get a bad link. This is because Differential is kind of special and the form isn't usable directly, even though Differential does use EditEngine.
Allow EditEngine to specify a different create URI, then specify the web UI paste-a-diff flow to fix this.
Test Plan:
- Added "Create Revision" to a portal, clicked it, was sensibly put on the diff flow.
- Grepped for `getCreateURI()`, the only other real use case is to render the "Create X" dropdowns in the upper right.
- Clicked one of those, still worked great.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T12098
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20360
Summary:
Depends on D20358. Fixes T12871. After refactoring, we can now tell when a "storage" menu item generated only disabled "display" menu items, and not pick any of them as the default rendering.
This means that if you're looking at a portal/menu with several dashboards, but can't see some at the top, you'll get the first one you can see.
Also clean up a lot of minor issues with less-common states.
Test Plan:
- Created a portal with two private dashboards and a public dashboard.
- Viewed it as another user, saw the default view show the dashboard I can actually see.
- Minor fix: Disabled and enabled the hard-coded "Home" item, now worked cleanly with the right menu state.
- Minor fix: added a motivator panel.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T12871
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20359
Summary:
Depends on D20357. Ref T13275. Now that there's a stronger layer between "stuff in the database" and "stuff on the screen", these subclasses all need to emit intermediate objects instead of raw, HTML-producing view objects.
This update is mostly mechanical.
Test Plan:
- Viewed Home, Favorites, Portals, User Profiles, Project Profiles.
- Clicked each item on each menu/profile type.
- Added every (I think?) type of item to a menu and clicked them all.
- Grepped for obsolete symbols (`newNavigationMenuItems`, `willBuildNavigationItems`).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13275
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20358
Summary:
Depends on D20356. Ref T13275. See also T12871 and T12949.
Currently, the whole "ProfileMenu" API operates around //stored// items. However, stored items are allowed to produce zero or more //display// items, and we sometimes want to highlight display item X but render stored item Y (as is the case with "Link" items pointing at `?filter=xyz` on Workboards).
For the most part, this either: doesn't work; or works by chance; or is kind of glued together with hope and prayer (as in D20353).
Put an actual structural layer in place between "stored/configured item" and "display item" that can link them together more clearly. Now:
- The list of `ItemConfiguration` objects (stored/configured items) is used to build an `ItemViewList`.
- This handles the selection/highlighting/default state, and knows which display items are related to which stored items.
- When we're all done figuring out what we're going to select and what we're going to highlight, it pops out an actual View which can build the HTML.
This requires API changes which are not included in this change, see next change.
This doesn't really do anything on its own, but builds toward a more satisfying fix for T12871. I'd hoped to avoid doing this for now, but wasn't able to get a patch I felt good about for T12871 built without fixing this first.
Test Plan: See next change.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13275
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20357
Summary:
Depends on D20355. Ref T13275. Ref T13247. Currently, "Hamburger" menus are not automatically built from navigation menus. However, this is (I'm almost completely sure?) a reasonable and appropriate default behavior, and saves us some code around profile menus.
With this rule in place, we can remove `setApplicationMenu()` and `getApplicationMenu()` from `StandardPageView`, since they have no callers.
This also updates a lot of profile menu callsites to a new API which is added in the next change.
Test Plan: See the next two changes.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13275, T13247
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20356
Summary:
Depends on D20353. Ref T13275. This is just some small quality-of-life fixes:
- When you add items to menus, they currently go below the "Edit Menu/Manage Menu" links by default. This isn't a very good place for them. Instead, lock "edit" items to the bottom of the menu.
- Lock profile pictures to the top of the menu. This just simplifies things a little.
- Show more iconography hints on the "edit menu items" UI.
- Add a "drag stuff to do things" hint if some stuff can be dragged.
Test Plan:
- Added new items to a Portal, they didn't go to the very bottom. Instead, they went above the "Edit/Manage" links; a sensible place for them.
- Viewed the "edit menu items" screen, saw more hints and visual richness.
- Viewed/edited Home, Projects, Portals, Favorites
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13275
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20355
Summary:
Depends on D20352. Fixes T12949. If a user adds a link (for example, to a workboard) that takes you to the same page but with some URI parameters, we'd prefer to highlight the "link" item instead of the default "workboard" item when you click it.
For example, you add a `/query/assigned/` "link" item to a workboard, called "Click This To Show Tasks Assigned To Me On This Workboard", i.e. filter the current view.
This is a pretty reasonable thing to want to do. When you click it, we'd like to highlight that item to show that you've activated the "Assigned to Me" filter you added.
However, we currently highlight the thing actually serving the content, i.e. the "Workboard" item.
Instead:
- When picking what to highlight, look through all the items for one with a link to the current request URI.
- If we find one or more, pick the one that would be the default.
- Otherwise, pick the first one.
This means that you can have several items like "?a=1", "?a=2", etc., and we will highlight them correctly when you click them.
This actual patch has some questionable bits (see some discussion in T13275), but I'd like to wait for stronger motivation to refactor it more extensively.
Test Plan:
- On a portal, added a `?a=1` link. Saw it highlight properly when clikced.
- On a workboard, added a link to the board itself with a different filter. Saw it highlight appropriately when clicked.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T12949
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20353
Summary:
Depends on D20349. Ref T13275. Currently, a default item is selected as a side effect of generating the full list of items, for absolutely no reason.
The logic to pick the currently selected item can also be separated out pretty easily.
(And fix a bug in with a weird edge case in projects.)
This doesn't really change anything, but it will probably make T12949 a bit easier to fix.
Test Plan: Viewed Home / projects / portals, clicked various links, got same default/selection behavior as before.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13275
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20352
Summary:
Depends on D20348. Ref T13275. Portals are mostly just a "ProfileMenuEngine" menu, and that code is already relatively modular/flexible, so set that up to start with.
The stuff it gets wrong right now is mostly around empty/no-permission states, since the original use cases (project menus) didn't have any of these states: it's not possible to have a project menu with no content.
Let the engine render an "empty" state (when there are no items that can render a content page) and try to make some of the empty behavior a little more user-friendly.
This mostly makes portals work, more or less.
Test Plan: {F6322284}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13275
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20349
Summary:
Ref T13275. Today, you can build a custom page on the home page, on project pages, and in your favorites menu.
PHI374 would approximately like to build a completely standalone custom page, and this generally seems like a reasonable capability which we should support, and which should be easy to support if the "custom menu" stuff is built right.
In the near future, I'm planning to shore up some of the outstanding issues with profile menus and then build charts (which will have a big dashboard/panel component), so adding Portals now should let me double up on a lot of the testing and maybe make some of it a bit easier.
Test Plan:
Viewed the list of portals, created a new portal. Everything is currently a pure skeleton with no unique behavior.
Here's a glorious portal page:
{F6321846}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13275
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20348
Summary:
There are two issues here I was trying to fix:
* Viewing `/conpherence` by logged out users on `secure` would generate an overheated query on `ConpherenceThreadQuery` `secure` has a ton of wacky threads with bogus names.
* When a user views a specific thread that they don't have permission to see, we attempt to fetch the thread's transactions before applying policy filtering. If the thread has more than 1000 comments, that query will also overheat instead of returning a policy exception.
I fixed the first problem, but started trying to fix the second by moving the transaction fetch to `didFilterPage` but it broke in strange ways so I gave up.
Also fix a dangling `qsprintf` update.
Test Plan: Loaded threads and the Conpherence homepage with and without logged in users.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20375
Summary: See PHI985. The layers above this may return `array()` to mean "one hunk with a line-1 offset". Accept either `array()` or `array(1 => ...)` to engage the scope engine.
Test Plan: See PHI985.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20363
Summary:
See PHI1182. Ref T13266. The recent fixes didn't quite cover the case where you have a query, but order by something other than relevance, and page forward.
Refine the tests around building/selecting these columns and paging values a little bit to be more specific about what they care about.
Test Plan:
Executed queries, then went to "Next Page", for:
- query text, non-relevance order.
- query text, relevance order.
- no query text, non-relevance order.
- no query text, relevance order.
Also, made an API call similar to the one in PHI1182.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13266
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20354
Summary: See PHI1180. Currently, when we failover to a replica, we may not log the failure. Failovers are serious business and bad news, so emit a log even if we are able to connect to the replica.
Test Plan:
Configured a bogus master and a good replica:
```
$ ./bin/mail list-outbound
[2019-03-29 16:26:09] PHLOG: 'Retrying (attempt 1) after connection failure ("AphrontConnectionQueryException", #2002): Attempt to connect to root@127.0.0.2 failed with error #2002: Operation timed out.' at [/Users/epriestley/dev/core/lib/libphutil/src/aphront/storage/connection/mysql/AphrontBaseMySQLDatabaseConnection.php:124]
[2019-03-29 16:26:19] PHLOG: 'Retrying (attempt 2) after connection failure ("AphrontConnectionQueryException", #2002): Attempt to connect to root@127.0.0.2 failed with error #2002: Operation timed out.' at [/Users/epriestley/dev/core/lib/libphutil/src/aphront/storage/connection/mysql/AphrontBaseMySQLDatabaseConnection.php:124]
[2019-03-29 16:26:29] EXCEPTION: (PhutilProxyException) Failed to connect to master database ("local_config"), failing over into read-only mode. {>} (AphrontConnectionQueryException) Attempt to connect to root@127.0.0.2 failed with error #2002: Operation timed out. at [<phutil>/src/aphront/storage/connection/mysql/AphrontBaseMySQLDatabaseConnection.php:362]
<...snip backtrace...>
3945 Voided email rP04f9e72cbd10: Don't subscribe bots implicitly when they act on objects, or when they are…
3946 Voided email rPdf53d72e794c: Allow "Move Tasks to Column..." to prompt for MFA
3947 Voided email rP492b03628f19: Fix a typo in Drydock "Land" operations
3948 Voided email rPb469a5134ddd: Allow "SMTP" and "Sendmail" mailers to have "Message-ID" behavior configured in…
3949 Voided email rPa6fd8f04792d: When performing complex edits, pause sub-editors before they publish to…
...
```
Configured a bogus master and a bogus replica:
```
$ ./bin/mail list-outbound
[2019-03-29 16:26:57] PHLOG: 'Retrying (attempt 1) after connection failure ("AphrontConnectionQueryException", #2002): Attempt to connect to root@127.0.0.2 failed with error #2002: Operation timed out.' at [/Users/epriestley/dev/core/lib/libphutil/src/aphront/storage/connection/mysql/AphrontBaseMySQLDatabaseConnection.php:124]
[2019-03-29 16:27:07] PHLOG: 'Retrying (attempt 2) after connection failure ("AphrontConnectionQueryException", #2002): Attempt to connect to root@127.0.0.2 failed with error #2002: Operation timed out.' at [/Users/epriestley/dev/core/lib/libphutil/src/aphront/storage/connection/mysql/AphrontBaseMySQLDatabaseConnection.php:124]
[2019-03-29 16:27:27] PHLOG: 'Retrying (attempt 1) after connection failure ("AphrontConnectionQueryException", #2002): Attempt to connect to root@127.0.0.3 failed with error #2002: Operation timed out.' at [/Users/epriestley/dev/core/lib/libphutil/src/aphront/storage/connection/mysql/AphrontBaseMySQLDatabaseConnection.php:124]
[2019-03-29 16:27:37] PHLOG: 'Retrying (attempt 2) after connection failure ("AphrontConnectionQueryException", #2002): Attempt to connect to root@127.0.0.3 failed with error #2002: Operation timed out.' at [/Users/epriestley/dev/core/lib/libphutil/src/aphront/storage/connection/mysql/AphrontBaseMySQLDatabaseConnection.php:124]
[2019-03-29 16:27:47] EXCEPTION: (PhabricatorClusterStrandedException) Unable to establish a connection to any database host (while trying "local_config"). All masters and replicas are completely unreachable.
AphrontConnectionQueryException: Attempt to connect to root@127.0.0.2 failed with error #2002: Operation timed out. at [<phabricator>/src/infrastructure/storage/lisk/PhabricatorLiskDAO.php:177]
<...snip backtrace...>
```
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20351
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/duo-broken-in-2019-week-12/2580/>.
The "live update Duo status" endpoint currently requires full sessions, and doesn't work from the session upgrade gate on login.
Don't require a full session to check the status of an MFA challenge.
Test Plan: Went through Duo gate in a new session, got a live update.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20347
Summary:
Fixes T13273. This element is a bit weird, but I think I fixed it without breaking anything.
The CSS is used by project hovercards and user hovercards, but they each have a class which builds mostly-shared-but-not-really-identical CSS, instead of having a single `View` class with modes. So I'm not 100% sure I didn't break something obscure, but I couldn't find anything this breaks.
The major issue is that all the text content has "position: absolute". Instead, make the image "absolute" and the text actual positioned content. Then fix all the margins/padding/spacing/layout and add overflow. Seems to work?
Plus: hide availability for disabled users, for consistency with D20342.
Test Plan:
Before:
{F6320155}
After:
{F6320156}
I think this is pixel-exact except for the overflow behavior.
Also:
- Viewed some other user hovercards, including a disabled user. They all looked unchanged.
- Viewed some project hovercards. They all looked good, too.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13273
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20344
Summary:
See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T138723>. That suggestion is a little light on details, but I basically agree that showing "Availability: Available" on disabled user profiles is kind of questionable/misleading.
Just hide event information on disabled profiles, since this doesn't seem worth building a special "Availability: Who Knows, They Are Disabled, Good Luck" disabled state for.
Test Plan: Looked at disabled and non-disabled user profiles, saw Calendar stuff only on the former.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20342
Summary: Ref T13266. Caught one more of these "directly setting afterID" issues in the logs.
Test Plan: Ran `bin/search index --type ConpherenceThread` before and after changes. Before: fatal about a direct call. After: clean index rebuild.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13266
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20341
Summary:
Ref PHI1173. Currently, you can edit an MFA'd comment without redoing MFA. This is inconsistent with the intent of the MFA badge, since it means an un-MFA'd comment may have an "MFA" badge on it.
Instead, implement these rules:
- If a comment was signed with MFA, you MUST MFA to edit it.
- When removing a comment, add an extra MFA prompt if the user has MFA. This one isn't strictly required, this action is just very hard to undo and seems reasonable to MFA.
Test Plan:
- Made normal comments and MFA comments.
- Edited normal comments and MFA comments (got prompted).
- Removed normal comments and MFA comments (prompted in both cases).
- Tried to edit an MFA comment without MFA on my account, got a hard "MFA absolutely required" failure.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20340
Summary:
See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T209449>.
The "Bulk Edit" flow works with `setContinueOnMissingFields(true)`, so `newRequiredError()` errors are ignored. This allows you to apply a transaction which changes the title to `""` (the empty string) without actually hitting any errors which the workflow respects.
(Normally, `setContinueOnMissingFields(...)` workflows only edit properties that can't be missing, like the status of an object, so this is an unusual flow.)
Instead, validate more narrowly:
- Transactions which would remove the title get an "invalid" error, which is respected even under "setContinueOnMissingFields()".
- Then, we try to raise a "missing/required" error if everything otherwise looks okay.
Test Plan:
- Edited a task title normally.
- Edited a task to remove the title (got an error).
- Created a task with no title (disallowed: got an error).
- Bulk edited a task to remove its title.
- Before change: allowed.
- After change: disallowed.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20339
Summary:
Depends on D20337. Fixes T12167. Ref T13272. On this page ("Favorites > Edit Favorites > Personal", for example) the curtain actions aren't available on mobile.
Normally, curtains are built with `Controller->newCurtainView()`, which sets an ID on the action list, which populates the header button. This curtain is built directly because there's no `Controller` handy.
To fix the issue, just set an ID. This could probably be cleaner, but that's likely a much more involved change.
Test Plan: Edited my favorites, narrowed the window, saw an "Actions" button.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272, T12167
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20338
Summary: Depends on D20336. Ref T13272. Fixes T12745. If you uninstall Conpherence, "Edit Favorites" and other editable menu interfaces still allow you to add "Conpherence" items. Prevent this.
Test Plan:
- Installed Conpherence: Saw option to add a "Conpherence" link when editing favorites menu.
- Uninstalled Conpherence: No more option.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272, T12745
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20337
Summary:
Depends on D20335. Ref T13263. Ref T13272. See PHI854. Ref T9903.
Currently, we don't provide a clear indicator that a query panel is showing a partial result set (UI looks the same whether there are more results or not).
We also don't provide any way to get to the full result set (regardless of whether it is the same as the visible set or not) on tab panels, since they don't inherit the header buttons.
To (mostly) fix these problems, add a "View All Results" button at the bottom of the list if the panel shows only a subset of results.
Test Plan:
{F6314560}
{F6314562}
{F6314564}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272, T13263, T9903
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20336
Summary:
Depends on D20334. Ref T13272. After recent changes to make overheating queries throw by default, dashboard panels now fail into an error state when they overheat.
This is a big step up from the hard-coded homepage panels removed by D20333, but can be improved. Let these panels render partial results when they overheat and show a human-readable warning.
Test Plan: {F6314114}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20335
Summary:
Depends on D20333. Ref T13272. Currently, dashboard query panels have an aesthetic but hard-to-see icon to view results, with no text label.
Instead, provide an easier-to-see button with a text label.
Test Plan: {F6314091}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20334
Summary:
Ref T13272. Currently, the hard-coded default homepage looks like a dashboard but is actually rendered completely manually.
This means that various panel rendering improvements we'd like to make (including better "Show More" behavior and better handling of overheated queries) won't work on the home page naturally: we'd have to make these changes twice, once for dashboards and once for the home page.
Instead, build the home page out of real panels. This turns out to be significantly simpler (I think the backend part of panels/dashboards is mostly on solid footing, the frontend just needs some work).
Test Plan:
Loaded the default home page, saw a thing which looked the same as the old thing. Changes I know about / expect:
- The headers for these panels are no longer linked, but they weren't colorized before so the links were hard to find. I plan to improve panel behavior for "find/more" in a followup.
- I've removed the "follow us on twitter" default NUX if feed is empty, since this seems like unnecessary incidental complexity.
- (Internal exception behavior should be better, now.)
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13272
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20333
Summary:
Ref T13269. Currently, if you're on a milestone workboard like this:
> Projects > Parent > Milestone > Workboard
The "Parent" link goes to the parent profile. More often, I want it to go to the parent workboard. Try doing that? This is kind of one-off but I suspect it's a better rule.
Also, consolidate one billion manual constructions of "/board/" URIs.
Test Plan: Viewed a milestone workboard, clicked the parent link, ended up on the parent workboard.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13269
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20331
Summary:
Ref T13269. These cards really have three states:
- Editable: shows a pencil icon edit button.
- You Do Not Have Permission To Edit This: shows a "no editing" icon in red.
- Hovecard: shouldn't show anything.
However, the "hovercard" and "no permission" states are currently the same state, so when I made the "no permission" state more obvious that made the hovercard go all weird.
Make these states explicitly separate states.
Test Plan:
Looked at a...
- Editable card on workboard: edit state.
- No permission card on workboard: no permission state.
- Any hovercard: "not editable, this is a hovercard" state.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13269
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20330
Summary: If "GD" doesn't support a particular image type, applying a cover image currently goes through but no-ops. Fail it earlier in the process with a more specific error.
Test Plan: Without PNG support locally, dropped a PNG onto a card on a workboard. Got a more useful error.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20328
Summary: This is a copy/paste/find-and-replace-all of the status rule added by D20288.
Test Plan: Made some triggers, moved some tasks, edited some triggers. Grepped for the word "status" in the new file.
Reviewers: epriestley
Reviewed By: epriestley
Subscribers: Korvin
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20325
Summary:
Depends on D20321. Fixes T12175. Ref T13074. Now that before/after PHIDs are suggestions, we can give the server a more complete view of what the client is trying to do so we're more likely to get a good outcome if the client view is out of date.
Instead of passing only the one directly adjacent card PHID, pass all the card PHIDs that the client thinks are in the same group.
(For gigantic columns with tens of thousands of tasks this might need some tweaking -- like, slice both lists down to 10 items -- but we can cross that bridge when we come to it.)
Test Plan:
- Dragged some cards around to top/bottom/middle positions, saw good positioning in all cases.
- In two windows, dragged stuff around on the same board. At least at first glance, conflicting simultaneous edits seemed to do reasonable things.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13074, T12175
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20322
Summary:
Depends on D20320. Ref T12175. Ref T13074. Currently, when you move a card between columns, the internal transaction takes exactly one `afterPHID` or `beforePHID` and moves the card before or after the specified card.
This is a fairly strict interpretation and causes a number of practical issues, mostly because the user/client view of the board may be out of date and the card they're dragging before or after may no longer exist: another user might have moved or hidden it between the last client update and the current time.
In T13074, we also run into a more subtle issue where a card that incorrectly appears in multiple columns fatals when dropped before or after itself.
In all cases, a better behavior is just to complete the move and accept that the position may not end up exactly like the user specified. We could prompt the user instead:
> You tried to drop this card after card X, but that card has moved since you last loaded the board. Reload the board and try again.
...but this is pretty hostile and probably rarely/never what the user wants.
Instead, accept a list of before/after PHIDs and just try them until we find one that works, or accept a default position if none work. In essentially all cases, this means that the move "just works" like users expect it to instead of fataling in a confusing/disruptive/undesirable (but "technically correct") way.
(A followup will make the client JS send more beforePHIDs/afterPHIDs so this works more often.)
We could eventually add a "strict" mode in the API or something if there's some bot/API use case for precise behavior here, but I suspect none exist today or are (ever?) likely to exist in the future.
Test Plan:
- (T13074) Inserted two conflicting rows to put a card on two columns on the same board. Dropped one version of it underneath the other version. Before: confusing fatal. After: cards merge sensibly into one consistent card.
- (T12175) Opened two views of a board. Moved card A to a different column on the first view. On the second view, dropped card B under card A (still showing in the old column). Before: confusing fatal. After: card ended up in the right column in approximately the right place, very reasonably.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13074, T12175
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20321
Summary:
Fixes T13270. In Diffusion, the "Code" tab is linked in a weird way that isn't consistent with the other tabs.
Particularly, if you navigate to `x/y/z/` and toggle between the "Branches" and "History" tabs (or other tabs), you keep your path. If you click "Code", you lose your path.
Instead, retain the path, so you can navigate somewhere and then toggle to/from the "Code" tab to get different views of the same path.
Test Plan: Browed into a repository, clicked "History", clicked "Code", ended up back in the place I started.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13270
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20323
Summary:
In some cases, we show a limited number of one type of object somewhere else, like "Recent Such-And-Such" or "Herald Rules Which Use This" or whatever.
We don't do a very good job of communicating that these are partial lists, or how to see all the results. Usually there's a button in the upper right, which is fine, but this could be better.
Add an explicit "more stuff" button that shows up where a pager would appear and makes it clear that (a) the list is partial; and (b) you can click the button to see everything.
Test Plan: {F6302793}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20315
Summary:
Ref T5474. In 99% of cases, a separate "archived/active" status for triggers probably doesn't make much sense: there's not much reason to ever disable/archive a trigger explcitly, and the archival rule is really just "is this trigger used by anything?".
(The one reason I can think of to disable a trigger manually is because you want to put something in a column and skip trigger rules, but you can already do this from the task detail page anyway, and disabling the trigger globally is a bad way to accomplish this if it's in use by other columns.)
Instead of adding a separate "status", just track how many columns a trigger is used by and consider it "inactive" if it is not used by any active columns.
Test Plan: This is slightly hard to test exhaustively since you can't share a trigger across multiple columns right now, but: rebuild indexes, poked around the trigger list and trigger details, added/removed triggers.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20308
Summary:
Ref T5474. Allow columns to play a sound when tasks are dropped.
This is a little tricky because Safari has changed somewhat recently to require some gymnastics to play sounds when the user didn't explicitly click something. Preloading the sound on the first mouse interaction, then playing and immediately pausing it seems to work, though.
Test Plan: Added a trigger with 5 sounds. In Safari, Chrome, and Firefox, dropped a card into the column. In all browsers, heard a nice sequence of 5 sounds played one after the other.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20306
Summary:
Ref T5474. The first rough cut of triggers showed some of the trigger rules in a tooltip when you hover over the "add/remove" trigger menu.
This isn't great since we don't have much room and it's a bit finnicky / hard to read.
Since we have a better way to show effects now in the drop preview, just use that instead. When you hover over the trigger menu, preview the trigger in the "drop effect" element, with a "Trigger: such-and-such" header.
Test Plan:
- This is pretty tough to screenshot.
- Hovered over menu, got a sensible preview of the trigger effects.
- Dragged a card over the menu, no preview.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20304
Summary: Ref T5474. When you view the main page for a rule, show what the rule does before you actually edit it.
Test Plan:
Viewed a real trigger, then faked invalid/unknown rules:
{F6300211}
{F6300212}
{F6300213}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20303
Summary:
Ref T5474. This provides a Herald-like UI for editing workboard trigger rules.
This probably has some missing pieces and doesn't actually save anything to the database yet, but the basics at least roughly work.
Test Plan: {F6299886}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20301
Summary:
Ref T10335. When you (for example) drag a "Resolved" task into a column with "Trigger: change status to resolved.", don't show a hint that the action will "Change status to resolved." since this isn't helpful and is somewhat confusing.
For now, the only visibility operator is "!=" since all current actions are simple field comparisons, but some actions in the future (like "add subscriber" or "remove project") might need other conditions.
Test Plan:
Dragged cards in ways that previously provided useless hints: move from column A to column B on a "Group by Priority" board; drag a resolved task to a "Trigger: change status to as resolved" column. Saw a more accurate preview in both cases.
Drags which actually cause effects still show the effects correctly.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10335
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20300
Summary:
Ref T10335. Ref T5474. When you drag-and-drop a card on a workboard, show a UI hint which lists all the things that the operation will do.
This shows: column moves; changes because of dragging a card to a different header; and changes which will be caused by triggers.
Not implemented here:
- Actions are currently shown even if they have no effect. For example, if you drag a "Normal" task to a different column, it says "Change priority to Normal.". I plan to hide actions which have no effect, but figuring this out is a little bit tricky.
- I'd like to make "trigger effects" vs "non-trigger effects" a little more clear in the future, probably.
Test Plan:
Dragged stuff between columns and headers, and into columns with triggers. Got appropriate preview text hints previewing what the action would do in the UI.
(This is tricky to take a screenshot of since it only shows up while the mouse cursor is down.)
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10335, T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20299
Summary: Depends on D20287. Ref T5474. This hard-codes a storage value for every trigger, with a "Change status to <default closed status>" rule and two bogus rules. Rules may now apply transactions when cards are dropped.
Test Plan: Dragged cards to a column with a trigger, saw them close.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20288
Summary:
Depends on D20286. Ref T5474. Attaches triggers to columns and makes "Remove Trigger" work.
(There's no "pick an existing named trigger from a list" UI yet, but I plan to add that at some point.)
Test Plan: Attached and removed triggers, saw column UI update appropriately.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20287
Summary: Depends on D20279. Ref T5474. Modernize these transactions before I add a new "TriggerTransaction" for setting triggers.
Test Plan: Created a column. Edited a column name and point limit. Hid and un-hid a column. Grepped for removed symbols.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20286
Summary:
Depends on D20278. Ref T5474. This change creates some new empty objects that do nothing, and some new views for looking at those objects. There's no actual useful behavior yet.
The "Edit" controller is custom instead of being driven by "EditEngine" because I expect it to be a Herald-style "add new rules" UI, and EditEngine isn't a clean match for those today (although maybe I'll try to move it over).
The general idea here is:
- Triggers are "real" objects with a real PHID.
- Each trigger has a name and a collection of rules, like "Change status to: X" or "Play sound: Y".
- Each column may be bound to a trigger.
- Multiple columns may share the same trigger.
- Later UI refinements will make the cases around "copy trigger" vs "reference the same trigger" vs "create a new ad-hoc trigger" more clear.
- Triggers have their own edit policy.
- Triggers are always world-visible, like Herald rules.
Test Plan: Poked around, created some empty trigger objects, and nothing exploded. This doesn't actually do anything useful yet since triggers can't have any rule behavior and columns can't actually be bound to triggers.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T5474
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20279
Summary:
When a TOS-like Legalpad document is marked "Require this document to use Phabricator", the login prompt shows a "Manage" button, but that button doesn't work.
When we're presenting a document as a session gate, don't show "Manage".
Test Plan: Viewed a required document during a session gate (no "Manage" button) and normally (saw "Manage" button).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20312
Summary:
See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T208254>.
I can't actually reproduce any issue here (we only show this field when creating a document, and only if the viewer is an administrator), so maybe this relied on some changes or was originally reported against older code.
Regardless, the validation isn't quite right: it requires administrator privileges to apply this transaction at all, but should only require administrator privileges to change the value.
Test Plan:
Edited Legalpad documents as an administrator and non-administrator before and after the change, with and without signatures being required.
Couldn't reproduce the original issue, but this version is generally more correct/robust.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20311
Summary: See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T182232>. We currently don't mark repository handles as closed.
Test Plan: Mentioned two repositories with `R1` (active) and `R2` (inactive). After patch, saw `R2` visually indicated as closed/inactive.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20309
Summary: See PHI1153. The "Runnable" and "Restartable" behaviors interact (to click "restart", you must be able to run the build AND it must be restartable). Make this more clear.
Test Plan: {F6301739}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20307
Summary: Ref T13266. This callsite is using the older API; swap it to use pagers.
Test Plan: Viewed a Phame blog post with siblings, saw the previous/next posts linked.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: nicolast
Maniphest Tasks: T13263, T13266
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20319
Summary:
Ref T13263. Two minor issues:
- The "reconcile" dialog shows the wrong sign because JS signs differ from normal signs (for example, PST or PDT or whatever we're in right now is shown as "UTC+7", but should be "UTC-7").
- The big dropdown of possible timezones lumps "UTC+X:30" timezones into "UTC+X".
Test Plan:
- Reconciled "America/Nome", saw negative UTC offsets for "America/Nome" and "America/Los_Angeles" (previously: improperly positive).
- Viewed the big timzone list, saw ":30" and ":45" timezones grouped/labeled more accurately.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13263
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20314
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/error-when-sending-a-message-chat-room/2548>.
Conpherence calls `setAfterID()` and `setBeforeID()` directly on a subquery, but these methods no longer exist.
Use a pager instead. This code probably shouldn't exist (we should use some other approach to fetch this data in most cases) but that's a larger change.
Test Plan: Sent messages in a Conpherence thread. Before: fatal; after: success. Viewed the Conphrence menu, loaded threads, etc.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20318
Summary:
Ref T13091. The Ferret "rank" column is a function of the query text and looks something like `SELECT ..., 2 + 2 AS rank, ...`.
You can't apply conditions to this kind of dynamic column with a WHERE clause: you get a slightly unhelpful error like "column rank unknown in where clause". You must use HAVING:
```
mysql> SELECT 2 + 2 AS x WHERE x = 4;
ERROR 1054 (42S22): Unknown column 'x' in 'where clause'
mysql> SELECT 2 + 2 AS x HAVING x = 4;
+---+
| x |
+---+
| 4 |
+---+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
```
Add a flag to paging column definitions to let them specify that they must be applied with HAVING, then apply the whole paging clause with HAVING if any column requires HAVING.
Test Plan:
- In Maniphest, ran a fulltext search matching more than 100 results, ordered by "Relevance", then clicked "Next Page".
- Before patch: query with `... WHERE rank > 123 OR ...` caused MySQL error because `rank` is not a WHERE-able column.
- After patch: query builds as `... HAVING rank > 123 OR ...`, pages properly, no MySQL error.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13091
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20298
Summary:
See downstream <https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T210482>.
On mobile, the task graph can take up most of the screen. Hide it on devices. Keep it on the standalone view if you're really dedicated and willing to rotate your phone or whatever to see the lines.
Test Plan: Dragged window real narrow, saw graph hide.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20313
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/unhandled-exception-on-show-older-changes/2545/>.
Before T13266, this query got away without having real paging because it used simple ID paging only and results are never actually hidden (today, you can always see all transactions on an object).
Provide `withIDs()` so the new, slightly stricter paging works.
Test Plan: On an object with "Show Older" in the transaction record, clicked the link. Before: exception in paging code (see Discourse link above). After: transactions loaded cleanly.
Reviewers: amckinley, avivey
Reviewed By: avivey
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20317
Ref T13266. We never page these queries, and previously never reached the
"nextPage()" method. The call order changed recently and this method is now
reachable. For now, just no-op it rather than throwing.
After the cursor changes, we may fatal on pages with a large number of children
because "c.title" is not a selected column. We currently join the "content"
table if "updated" is part of the order vector, but not if "title" is part of
the order vector. This isn't right: "updated" is on the primary table, and only
"content" is on the joined table.
Summary:
Ref T13091. In Differential, if you provide a query and "Sort by: Relevance", we build a query like this:
```
((SELECT revision.* FROM ... ORDER BY rank) UNION ALL (SELECT revision.* FROM ... ORDER BY rank)) ORDER BY rank
```
The internal "ORDER BY rank" is technically redundant (probably?), but doesn't hurt anything, and makes construction easier.
The problem is that the outer "ORDER BY rank" at the end, which attempts to order the results of the two parts of the UNION, can't actually order them, since `rank` wasn't selected.
(The column isn't actually "rank", which //is// selected -- it's the document modified/created subcolumns, which are not.)
To fix this, actually select the fulltext columns into the result set.
Test Plan:
- Ran a non-empty fulltext query in Differential with "Bucket: Required Action" selected so the UNION construction fired.
- Ran normal queries in Maniphest and global search.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13091
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20297
Summary:
Ref T13091. If you "Order By: Relevance" but don't actually specify a query, we currently raise a bare exception.
This operation is sort of silly/pointless, but it seems like it's probably best to just return the results for the other constraints in the fallback order (usually, by ID). Alternatively, we could raise a non-bare exception here ("You need to provide a fulltext query to order by relevance.")
Test Plan: Queried tasks by relevance with no actual query text.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13091
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20296
Summary:
Ref T13259. Currently, visiting a page that executes a query with an invalid cursor raises a bare exception that escapes to top level.
Catch this a little sooner and tailor the page a bit.
Test Plan: Visited `/maniphest/?after=335234234223`, saw a nicer exception page.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13259
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20295
Summary:
Ref T13259. Currently, queries set a flag and return a partial result set when they overheat. This is mostly okay:
- It's very unusual for queries to overheat if they don't have a real viewer.
- Overheating is rare in general.
- In most cases where queries can overheat, the context is a SearchEngine UI, which handles this properly.
In T13259, we hit a case where a query with an omnipotent viewer can overheat: if you have more than 1,000 consecutive commits in the database with invalid `repositoryID` values, we'll overheat and bail out. This is pretty bad, since we don't process everything.
Change this beahvior:
- Throw by default, so this stuff doesn't slip through the cracks.
- Handle the SearchEngine case explicitly ("it's okay to overheat, we'll handle it").
- Make `QueryIterator` disable overheating behavior: if we're iterating over all objects, we want to hit the whole table even if most of it is garbage.
There are some cases where this might cause new exception behavior that we don't necessarily want. For example, in Owners, each package shows "recent commits in this package". If you can't see the first 1,000 recent commits, you'd previously get a slow page with no results. Now you'll probably get an exception.
If these crop up, I think the best approach for now is to deal with them on a case-by-case basis and see how far we get. In the "Owners" case, it might be good to query by repositories you can see first, then query by commits in the package in those repositories. That should give us a better outcome than any generic behavior we could implement.
Test Plan:
- Added 100000 to all repositoryID values for commits on my local install.
- Before making changes, ran `bin/repository rebuild-identities --all --trace`. Saw the script process 1,000 rows and exit silently.
- Applied the first part ("throw by default") and ran `bin/repository rebuild-identities`. Saw the script process 1,000 rows, then raise an exception.
- Applied the second part ("disable for queryiterator") and ran the script again. Saw the script process all 15,000 rows without issues (although none are valid and none actually load).
- Viewed Diffusion, saw appropriate NUX / "overheated" UIs.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13259
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20294
Summary:
Depends on D20292. Ref T13259. This converts the rest of the `getPagingValueMap()` callsites to operate on internal cursors instead.
These are pretty one-off for the most part, so I'll annotate them inline.
Test Plan:
- Grouped tasks by project, sorted by title, paged through them, saw consistent outcomes.
- Queried edges with "edge.search", paged through them using the "after" cursor.
- Poked around the other stuff without catching any brokenness.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13259
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20293
Summary:
Depends on D20291. Ref T13259. Move all the simple cases (where paging depends only on the partial object and does not depend on keys) to a simple wrapper.
This leaves a smaller set of more complex cases where we care about external data or which keys were requested that I'll convert in followups.
Test Plan: Poked at things, but a lot of stuff is still broken until everything is converted.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13259
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20292
Summary:
Ref T13259.
(NOTE) This is "infrastructure/guts" only and breaks some stuff in Query subclasses. I'll fix that stuff in a followup, it's just going to be a larger diff that's mostly mechanical.
When a user clicks "Next Page" on a tasks view and gets `?after=100`, we want to show them the next 100 //visible// tasks. It's possible that tasks 1-100 are visible, but tasks 101-788 are not, and the next visible task is 789.
We load task ID `100` first, to make sure they can actually see it: you aren't allowed to page based on objects you can't see. If we let you, you could use "order=title&after=100", plus creative retitling of tasks, to discover the title of task 100: create tasks named "A", "B", etc., and see which one is returned first "after" task 100. If it's "D", you know task 100 must start with "C".
Assume the user can see task 100. We run a query like `id > 100` to get the next 100 tasks.
However, it's possible that few (or none) of these tasks can be seen. If the next visible task is 789, none of the tasks in the next page of results will survive policy filtering.
So, for queries after the initial query, we need to be able to page based on tasks that the user can not see: we want to be able to issue `id > 100`, then `id > 200`, and so on, until we overheat or find a page of results (if 789-889 are visible, we'll make it there before overheating).
Currently, we do this in a not-so-great way:
- We pass the external cursor (`100`) directly to the subquery.
- We query for that object using `getPagingViewer()`, which is a piece of magic that returns the real viewer on the first page and the omnipotent viewer on the 2nd..nth page. This is very sketchy.
- The subquery builds paging values based on that object (`array('id' => 100)`).
- We turn the last result from the subquery back into an external cursor (`200`) and save it for the next time.
Note that the last step happens BEFORE policy (and other) filtering.
The problems with this are:
- The phantom-schrodinger's-omnipotent-viewer thing isn't explicity bad, but it's sketchy and generally not good. It feels like it could easily lead to a mistake or bug eventually.
- We issue an extra query each time we page results, to convert the external cursor back into a map (`100`, `200`, `300`, etc).
- In T13259, there's a new problem: this only works if the object is filtered out for policy reasons and the omnipotent viewer can still see it. It doesn't work if the object is filtered for some other reason.
To expand on the third point: in T13259, we hit a case where 100+ consecutive objects are broken (they point to a nonexistent `repositoryID`). These objects get filtered unconditionally. It doesn't matter if the viewer is omnipotent or not.
In that case: we set the next external cursor from the raw results (e.g., `200`). Then we try to load it (using the omnipotent viewer) to turn it into a map of values for paging. This fails because the object isn't loadable, even as the omnipotent viewer.
---
To fix this stuff, the new approach steps back a little bit. Primarily, I'm separating "external cursors" from "internal cursors".
An "External Cursor" is a string that we can pass in `?after=X` URIs. It generally identifies an object which the user can see.
An "Internal Cursor" is a raw result from `loadPage()`, i.e. before policy filtering. Usually, (but not always) this is a `LiskDAO` object that doesn't have anything attached yet and hasn't been policy filtered.
We now do this, broadly:
- Convert the external cursor to an internal cursor.
- Execute the query using internal cursors.
- If necessary, convert the last visible result back into an external cursor at the very end.
This fixes all the problems:
- Sketchy Omnipotent Viewer: We no longer ever use an omnipotent viewer. (We pick cursors out of the result set earlier, instead.)
- Too Many Queries: We only issue one query at the beginning, when going from "external" to "internal". This query is generally unavoidable since we need to make sure the viewer can see the object and that it's a real / legitimate object. We no longer have to query an extra time for each page.
- Total Failure on Invalid Objects: we now page directly with objects out of `loadPage()`, before any filtering, so we can page over invisible or invalid objects without issues.
This change switches us over to internal/external cursors, and makes simple cases (ID-based ordering) work correctly. It doesn't work for complex cases yet since subclasses don't know how to get paging values out of an internal cursor yet. I'll update those in a followup.
Test Plan: For now, poked around a bit. Some stuff is broken, but normal ID-based lists load correctly and page properly. See next diff for a more detailed test plan.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13259
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20291
Summary:
See PHI1134. Previously, see T13082 and D19969 for some sort-of-related stuff.
Currently, edits work roughly like this:
- Suppose we're editing object X, and we're also going to edit some other object, Y, because X mentioned Y or the edit is making X a child or parent of Y, or unblocking Y.
- Do the actual edit to X, including inverse edits ("alice mentioned Y on X.", "alice added a child revision: X", etc) which apply to Y.
- Run Herald rules on X.
- Publish the edit to X.
The "inverse edits" currently do this whole process inline, in a sub-editor. So the flow expands like this:
- Begin editing X.
- Update properties on X.
- Begin inverse-edge editing Y.
- Update properties on Y.
- Run (actually, skip) Herald rules on Y.
- Publish edits to Y.
- Run Herald rules on X.
- Publish edits to X.
Notably, the "Y" stuff publishes before the "X" Herald rules run. This creates potential problems:
- Herald rules may change the name or visibility policy of "X", but we'll publish mail about it via the edits to Y before those edits apply. This is a problem only in theory, we don't ship any upstream rules like this today.
- Herald rules may "Require Secure Mail", but we won't know that at the time we're building mail about the indirect change to "Y". This is a problem in practice.
Instead, switch to this new flow, where we stop the sub-editors before they publish, then publish everything at the very end once all the edits are complete:
- Begin editing X.
- Update properties on X.
- Begin inverse-edge editing Y.
- Update properties on Y.
- Skip Herald on Y.
- Run Herald rules on X.
- Publish X.
- Publish all child-editors of X.
- Publish Y.
Test Plan:
- Created "Must Encrypt" Herald rules for Tasks and Revisions.
- Edited object "A", an object which the rules applied to directly, and set object "B" (a different object which the rules did not hit) as its parent/child and/or unblocked it.
- In `bin/mail list-outbound`, saw:
- Mail about object "A" all flagged as "Must Encrypt".
- Normal mail from object B not flagged "Must Encrypt".
- Mail from object B about changing relationships to object A flagged as "Must Encrypt".
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20283
Summary:
Fixes T13265. See that task for discussion. Briefly:
- For mailers that use other mailers (SMTP, Sendmail), optionally let administrators set `"message-id": false` to improve threading behavior if their local Postfix is ultimately sending through SES or some other mailer which will replace the "Message-ID" header.
Also:
- Postmark is currently marked as supporting "Message-ID", but it does not actually support "Message-ID" on `secure.phabricator.com` (mail arrives with a non-Phabricator message ID). I suspect this was just an oversight in building or refactoring the adapter; correct it.
- Remove the "encoding" parameter from "sendmail". It think this was just missed in the cleanup a couple months ago; it is no longer used or documented.
Test Plan: Added and ran unit tests. (These feel like overkill, but this is super hard to test on real code.) See T13265 for evidence that this overall approach improves behavior.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13265
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20285
Summary:
Ref T13074. Currently, if you "Move Tasks to Column..." on a board and some of the tasks require MFA to edit, the workflow fatals out.
After this change, it works properly. You still have to answer a separate MFA prompt for //each// task, which is a little ridiculous, but at least doable. A reasonable future refinement would be to batch these MFA prompts, but this is currently the only use case for that.
Test Plan: Set a task to a "Require MFA" status, bulk-moved it with other tasks on a workboard. Was prompted, answered MFA prompt, got a move.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13074
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20282
Summary:
See PHI1098. When users comment on objects, they are automatically subscribed. And when `@alice` mentions `@bailey` on a task, that usually subscribes `@bailey`.
These rules make less sense if the user is a bot. There's generally no reason for a bot to automatically subscribe to objects it acts on (it's not going to read email and follow up later), and it can always subscribe itself pretty easily if it wants (since everything is `*.edit` now and supports subscribe transactions).
Also, don't subscribe bots when they're mentioned for similar reasons. If users really want to subscribe bots, they can do so explicitly.
These rules seem slightly like "bad implicit magic" since it's not immediately obvious why `@abc` subscribes that user but `@xyz` may not, but some of these rules are fairly complicated already (e.g., `@xyz` doesn't subscribe them if they unsubscribed or are implicitly subscribed) and this feels like it gets the right/desired result almost-always.
Test Plan:
On a fresh task:
- Mentioned a bot in a comment with `@bot`.
- Before patch: bot got CC'd.
- After patch: no CC.
- Called `maniphest.edit` via the API to add a comment as a bot.
- Before patch: bot got CC'd.
- After patch: no CC.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20284
Summary:
Depends on D20277. Ref T10333.
- Put profile icons on "Group by Owner".
- Add a similar "Group by Author". Probably not terribly useful, but cheap to implement now.
- Add "Sort by Title". Very likely not terribly useful, but cheap to implement and sort of flexible?
Test Plan: {F6265396}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20278
Summary: Depends on D20279. See D20269. Agreed that explicit `-1` is probably more clear.
Test Plan: Viewed boards in each sort/group order.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20281
Summary:
Depends on D20276. Ref T10333. This one is a little bit rough/experimental, and I'm sort of curious what feedback we get about it. Weird stuff:
- All statuses are always shown, even if the filter prevents tasks in that status from appearing (which is the default, since views are "Open Tasks" by default).
- Pro: you can close tasks by dragging them to a closed status.
- Con: lots of empty groups.
- The "Duplicate" status is shown.
- Pro: Shows closed duplicate tasks.
- Con: Dragging tasks to "Duplicate" works, but is silly.
- Since boards show "open tasks" by default, dragging stuff to a closed status and then reloading the board causes it to vanish. This is kind of how everything works, but more obvious/defaulted on "Status".
These issues might overwhelm its usefulness, but there isn't much cost to nuking it in the future if feedback is mostly negative/confused.
Test Plan: Grouped a workboard by status, dragged stuff around.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20277
Summary: Depends on D20275. Fixes T10578. This is a static sorting (like "By Date Created") where you can't change point values by dragging. You can still drag cards between columns, or use the "Edit" icon to change point values.
Test Plan: {F6265191}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10578
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20276
Summary:
Depends on D20274. Ref T10578. This is en route to an ordering by points, it's just a simpler half-step on the way there.
Allow columns to be sorted by creation date, so the newest tasks rise to the top.
In this ordering you can never reposition cards, since editing a creation date by dragging makes no sense. This will be true of the "points" ordering too (although we could imagine doing something like prompting the user, some day).
Test Plan: Viewed boards by "natural" (allows reordering both when dragging within and between columns), "priority" (reorder only within columns), and "creation date" (reorder never). Dragged cards around between and within columns, got apparently sensible behavior.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10578
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20275
Summary:
Depends on D20273. Fixes T10722. Currently, we don't make it very clear when a card can't be edited. Long ago, some code made a weak attempt to do this (by hiding the "grip" on the card), but later UI changes hid the "grip" unconditionally so that mooted things.
Instead:
- Replace the edit pencil with a red lock.
- Provide cursor hints for grabbable / not grabbable.
- Don't let users pick up cards they can't edit.
Test Plan: On a workboard with a mixture of editable and not-editable cards, hovered over the different cards and was able to figure out which ones I could drag or not drag pretty easily. Picked up cards I could pick up, wasn't able to drag cards I can't edit.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10722
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20274
Summary: Depends on D20272. Ref T13074. When a task requires MFA to edit, you currently get a fatal. Provide a cancel URI so the prompt works and the edit can go through.
Test Plan:
- Locked a task, dragged it on a workboard.
- Before: fatal trying to build an MFA gate.
- After: got MFA gated, answered prompt, action went through.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13074
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20273
Summary:
Depends on D20270. Ref T10333. If you create a task with a new owner, or edit a task and change the priority/owner, we want to move it (and possibly create a new header) when the response comes back.
Make sure the response includes the appropriate details about the object's header and position.
Test Plan:
- Grouped by Owner.
- Created a new task with a new owner, saw the header appear.
- Edited a task and changed it to give it a new owner, saw the header appear.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20271
Summary: Depends on D20269. Ref T10333. Now that orderings are modularized, this is fairly easy to implement. This isn't super fancy for now (e.g., no profile images) but I'll touch it up in a general polish followup.
Test Plan: {F6264596}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20270
Summary:
Depends on D20267. Depends on D20268. Ref T10333. Currently, we support "Natural" and "Priority" orders, but a lot of the particulars are pretty hard-coded, including some logic in `ManiphestTask`.
Although it's not clear that we'll ever put other types of objects on workboards, it seems generally bad that you need to modify `ManiphestTask` to get a new ordering.
Pull the ordering logic out into a `ProjectColumnOrder` hierarchy instead, and let each ordering define the things it needs to work (name, icon, what headers look like, how different objects are sorted, and how to apply an edit when you drop an object under a header).
Then move the existing "Natural" and "Priority" orders into this new hierarchy.
This has a minor bug where using the "Edit" workflow to change a card's priority on a priority-ordered board doesn't fully refresh card/header order since the response isn't ordering-aware. I'll fix that in an upcoming change.
Test Plan: Grouped workboards by "Natural" and "Priority", dragged stuff around within and between columns, grepped for all touched symbols.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20269
Summary:
Depends on D20265. Ref T10333. Now that neither task lists nor workboards use subpriority, we can remove all the readers and writers.
I'm not actually getting rid of the column data yet, but anticipate doing that in a future change.
Note that the subpriority algorithm (removed here) is possibly better than the "natural order" algorithm still in use. It's a bit more clever, and likely performs far fewer writes. I might make the "natural order" code use an algorithm more similar to the "subpriority" algorithm in the future.
Test Plan: Grepped for `subpriority`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20266
Summary:
Depends on D20263. Ref T10333. I want to add groups like "Assignee" to workboards. This means you may have several tasks grouped under, say, "Alice".
When you drag the bottom-most task under "Alice" to the top, what does that mean?
Today, the only grouping is "Priority", and it means "change the task's secret/hidden global subpriority". However, this seems to generally be a somewhat-bad answer, and is quite complex. It also doesn't make much sense for an author grouping, since one task can't really be "more assigned" to Alice than another task.
Users likely intend this operation to mean "move it, visually, with no other effects" -- that is, user intent is to shuffle sticky notes around on a board, not edit anything substantive. The meaning is probably something like "this is similar to other nearby tasks" or "maybe this is a good place to start", which we can't really capture with any top-level attribute.
We could extend "subpriority" and give tasks a secret/hidden "sub-assignment strength" and so on, but this seems like a bad road to walk down. We'll also run into trouble later when subproject columns may appear on the board, and a user could want to put a task in different positions on different subprojects, conceivably.
In the "Natural" order view, we already have what is probably a generally better approach for this: a task display order particular to the column, that just remembers where you put the sticky notes.
Move away from "subpriority", and toward a world where we mostly keep sticky notes where you stuck them and move them around only when we have to. With no grouping, we still sort by "natural" order, as before. With priority grouping, we now sort by `<priority, natural>`. When you drag stuff around inside a priority group, we update the natural order.
This means that moving cards around on a "priority" board will also move them around on a "natural" board, at least somewhat. I think this is okay. If it's not intuitive, we could give every ordering its own separate "natural" view, so we remember where you stuck stuff on the "priority" board but that doesn't affect the "Natural" board. But I suspect we won't need to.
Test Plan:
- Viewed and dragged a natural board.
- Viewed and dragged a priority board.
- Dragged within and between groups of 0, 1, and multiple items.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20265
Summary:
Ref T13074. Today, in normal task list views in Maniphest (not workboards), you can (sometimes) reorder tasks if the view is priority-sorted.
I suspect no one ever does this, few users know it's supported, and that it was basically rendered obsolete the day we shipped workboards.
This also means that we need to maintain a global "subpriority" for tasks, which distinguishes between different tasks at the same priority level (e.g., "High") and maintains a consistent ordering on workboards.
As we move toward making workboards more flexible (e.g., group by author / owner / custom fields), I'd like to try moving away from "subpriority" and possibly removing it entirely, in favor of "natural order", which basically means "we kind of remember where you put the card and it works a bit like a sticky note".
Currently, the "natural order" and "subpriority" systems are sort of similar but also sort of in conflict, and the "subpriority" system can't really be extended while the "natural order / column position" system can.
The only real reason to have a global "subpriority" is to support the list-view drag-and-drop.
It's possible I'm wrong about this and a bunch of users love this feature, but we can re-evaluate if we get feedback in this vein.
(This just removes UI, the actual subpriority system is still intact and still used on workboards.)
Test Plan: Viewed task lists, was no longer able to drag stuff. Grepped for affected symbols. Dragged stuff in remaining grippable lists, like "Edit Forms" in EditEngine config.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13074
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20263
Summary:
Ref T10333. Ref T8135. Depends on D20247. Allow users to drag-and-drop cards on a priority-sorted workboard under headers, even if the header has no other cards.
As of D20247, headers show up but they aren't really interactive. Now, you can drag cards directly underneath a header (instead of only between other cards). For example, if a column has only one "Wishlist" task, you may drag it under the "High", "Normal", or "Low" priority headers to select a specific priority.
(Some of this code still feels a little rough, but I think it will generalize once other types of sorting are available.)
Test Plan: Dragged cards within and between priority groups, saw appropriate priority edits applied in every case I could come up with.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333, T8135
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20248
Summary:
Ref T10333. When workboards are ordered (for example, by priority), add headers to the various groups. Major goals are:
- Allow users to drag-and-drop to set values that no cards currently have: for example, you can change a card priority to "normal" by dragging it under the "normal" header, even if no other cards in the column are currently "Normal".
- Make future orderings more useful, particularly "order by assignee". We don't really have room to put the username on every card and it would create a fair amount of clutter, but we can put usernames in these headers and then reference them with just the profile picture. This also allows you to assign to users who are not currently assigned anything in a given column.
- Make the drag-and-drop behavior more obvious by showing what it will do more clearly (see T8135).
- Make things a little easier to scan in general: because space on cards is limited, some information isn't conveyed very clearly (for example, priority information is currently conveyed //only// through color, which can be hard to pick out visually and is probably not functional for users who need vision accommodations).
- Maybe do "swimlanes": this is pretty much a "swimlanes" UI if we add whitespace at the bottom of each group so that the headers line up across all the columns (e.g., "Normal" is at the same y-axis position in every column as you scroll down the page). Not sold on this being useful, but it's just a UI adjustment if we do want to try it.
NOTE: This only makes these headers work for display.
They aren't yet recognized as targets by the drag list UI, so you can't drag cards into an empty group. I'll tackle that in a followup.
Test Plan: {F6257686}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T10333
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20247
Summary:
Ref T13249. Ref T13258. In some cases, builds are not idempotent and should not be restarted casually.
If the scary part is at the very end (deploy / provision / whatever), it could be okay to restart them if they previously failed.
Also, make the "reasons why you can't restart" and "explanations of why you can't restart" logic a little more cohesive.
Test Plan:
- Tried to restart builds in various states (failed/not failed, restartable always/if failed/never, already restarted), got appropriate errors or restarts.
- (I'm not sure the "Autoplan" error is normally reachable, since you can't edit autoplans to configure things to let you try to restart them.)
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258, T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20252
Summary:
Depends on D20259. Now that we can index Herald rules to affected objects, show callers on the "Webhooks" UI.
A few other rule types could get indexes too ("Sign Legalpad Documents", "Add Reviewers", "Add Subscribers"), but I think they're less likely to be useful since those triggers are usually more obvious (the transaction timeline makes it clearer what happened/why). We could revisit this in the future now that it's a possibility.
Test Plan: {F6260106}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20260
Summary:
See PHI1123. The key on this table is `<resource, type, code>` but we currently query for only `<type, code>`. This can't use the key.
Constrain the query to the resource we expect (the repository) so it can use the key.
Test Plan: Pushed files using LFS. See PHI1123 for more, likely.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20261
Summary:
Ref T13258. Provide an easy way to find rules which trigger a particular build plan from the build plan page.
The implementation here ends up a little messy: we can't just search for `actionType = 'build' AND targetPHID = '<build plan PHID>'` since the field is a blob of JSON.
Instead, make rules indexable and write a "build plan is affected by rule actions" edge when indexing rules, then search on that edge.
For now, only "Run Build Plan: ..." rules actually write this edge, since I think (?) that it doesn't really have meaningful values for other edge types today. Maybe "Call Webhooks", and you could get a link from a hook to rules that trigger it? Reasonable to do in the future.
Things end up a little bit rough overall, but I think this panel is pretty useful to add to the Build Plan page.
This index needs to be rebuilt with `bin/search index --type HeraldRule`. I'll call this out in the changelog but I'm not planning to explicitly migrate or add an activity, since this is only really important for larger installs and they probably (?) read the changelog. As rules are edited over time, this will converge to the right behavior even if you don't rebuild the index.
Test Plan: {F6260095}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20259
Summary: Depends on D20256. Ref T13249. See PHI1115. This primarily makes `bin/policy unlock --owner epriestley T123` work. This is important for "Edit Locked" tasks, since changing the edit policy doesn't really do anything.
Test Plan: Hard-locked a task as "alice", reassigned it to myself with `bin/policy unlock --owner epriestley`.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20257
Summary:
See PHI1115. Ref T13249. Currently, you can `bin/policy unlock` objects which have become inaccessible through some sort of policy mistake.
This script uses a very blunt mechanism to perform unlocks: just manually calling `setXPolicy()` and then trying to `save()` the object. Improve things a bit:
- More surgical: allow selection of which policies you want to adjust with "--view", "--edit", and "--owner" (potentially important for some objects like Herald rules which don't have policies, and "edit-locked" tasks which basically ignore the edit policy).
- More flexible: Instead of unlocking into "All Users" (which could be bad for stuff like Passphrase credentials, since you create a short window where anyone can access them), take a username as a parameter and set the policy to "just that user". Normally, you'd run this as `bin/policy unlock --view myself --edit myself` or similar, now.
- More modular: We can't do "owner" transactions in a generic way, but lay the groundwork for letting applications support providing an owner reassignment mechanism.
- More modern: Use transactions, not raw `set()` + `save()`.
This previously had some hard-coded logic around unlocking applications. I've removed it, and the new generic stuff doesn't actually work. It probably should be made to work at some point, but I believe it's exceptionally difficult to lock yourself out of applications, and you can unlock them with `bin/config set phabricator.application-settings ...` anyway so I'm not too worried about this. It's also hard to figure out the PHID of an application and no one has ever asked about this so I'd guess the reasonable use rate of `bin/policy unlock` to unlock applications in the wild may be zero.
Test Plan:
- Used `bin/policy unlock` to unlock some objects, saw sensible transactions.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20256
Summary:
Ref T13249. See PHI1115. I initially wanted to make `bin/policy unlock --owner <user> H123` work to transfer ownership of a Herald rule, although I'm no longer really sure this makes much sense.
In any case, this makes things a little better and more modern.
I removed the storage table for rule comments. Adding comments to Herald rules doesn't work and probably doesn't make much sense.
Test Plan: Created and edited Herald rules, grepped for all the transaction type constants.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20258
Summary:
Ref T13249. Using "--as" to call some Conduit methods as a user can currently fatal when trying to access settings/preferences.
Allow inline regeneration of user caches.
Test Plan: Called `project.edit` to add a member. Before: constructing a policy field tried to access the user's preferences and failed. After: Smooth sailing.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20255
Summary:
Ref T13249.
- When a line has only increased in indent depth, don't red-fill highlight the left side of the diff. Since reading a diff //mostly// involves focusing on the right side, indent depth changes are generally visible enough without this extra hint. The extra hint can become distracting in cases where there is a large block of indent depth changes.
- Move the markers slightly to the left, to align them with the gutter.
- Make them slightly opaque so they're a little less prominent.
Test Plan: See screenshots.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13249
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20251
Summary:
Ref T13258. The general idea here is "if arc land prompted you and you hit 'y', you get a warning about it on the timeline".
This is similar to the existing warning about landing revisions in the wrong state and hitting "y" to get through that. See D18808, previously.
These warnings make it easier to catch process issues at a glance, especially because the overall build status is now more complicated (and may legally include some failures on tests which are marked as unimportant).
The transaction stores which builds had problems, but I'm not doing anything to render that for now. I think you can usually figure it out from the UI already; if not, we could refine this.
Test Plan:
- Used `bin/differential attach-commit` to trigger extraction/attachment.
- Attached a commit to a revision with various build states, and various build plan "Warn When Landing" flags.
- Got sensible warnings and non-warnings based on "Warn When Landing" setting.
{F6251631}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20239
Summary: Ref T13258. Make the "Affects Buildable" option actually work.
Test Plan:
- As in previous change, created a "wait for HTTP request" build plan and had it always run against every revision.
- Created revisions, waited a bit, then sent the build a "Fail" message, with different values of "Affects Buildable":
- "Always": Same behavior as today. Buildable waited for the build, then failed when it failed.
- "While Building": Buildable waited for the build, but passed even though it failed (buildable has green checkmark even though build is red):
{F6250359}
- "Never": Buildable passed immediately (buildable has green checkmark even though build is still running):
{F6250360}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20233
Summary: Ref T13258. Makes the new "Hold Drafts" behavior actually work.
Test Plan:
- Created a build plan which does "Make HTTP Request" somewhere random and then waits for a message.
- Created a Herald rule which "Always" runs this plan.
- Created revisions, loaded them, then sent their build targets a "fail" message a short time later.
- With "Always": Current behavior. Revision was held as a draft while building, and returned to me for changes when the build failed.
- With "If Building": Revision was held as a draft while building, but promoted once the build failed.
- With "Never": Revision promoted immediately, ignoring the build completely.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20232
Summary:
Ref T13258. Implements the "Restartable" behavior, to control whether a build may be restarted or not.
This is fairly straightforward because there are already other existing reasons that a build may not be able to be restarted.
Test Plan: Restarted a build. Marked it as not restartable, saw "Restart" action become disabled. Tried to restart it anyway, got a useful error message.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20230
Summary:
Ref T13258. Fixes T11415. This makes "Runnable" actually do something:
- With "Runnable" set to "If Editable" (default): to manually run, pause, resume, abort, or restart a build, you must normally be able to edit the associated build plan.
- If you toggle "Runnable" to "If Viewable", anyone who can view the build plan may take these actions.
This is pretty straightforward since T9614 already got us pretty close to this ruleset a while ago.
Test Plan:
- Created a Build Plan, set "Can Edit" to just me, toggled "Runnable" to "If Viewable"/"If Editable", tried to take actions as another user.
- With "If Editable", unable to run, pause, resume, abort, or restart as another user.
- With "If Viewable", those actions work.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258, T11415
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20229
Summary: Ref T13258. This will support changing behaviors in "arc land".
Test Plan: Called "harbormaster.buildplan.search", saw behavior information in results.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20228
Summary:
Depends on D20219. Ref T13258. Ref T11415. Installs sometimes have long-running builds or unimportant builds which they may not want to hold up drafts, affect buildable status, or warn during `arc land`.
Some builds have side effects (like deployment or merging) and are not idempotent. They can cause problems if restarted.
In other cases, builds are isolated and idempotent and generally safe, and it's okay for marketing interns to restart them.
To address these cases, add "Behaviors" to Build Plans:
- Hold Drafts: Controls how the build affects revision promotion from "Draft".
- Warn on Land: Controls the "arc land" warning.
- Affects Buildable: Controls whether we care about this build when figuring out if a buildable passed or failed overall.
- Restartable: Controls whether this build may restart or not.
- Runnable: Allows you to weaken the requirements to run the build if you're confident it's safe to run it on arbitrary old versions of things.
NOTE: This only implements UI, none of these options actually do anything yet.
Test Plan:
Mostly poked around the UI. I'll actually implement these behaviors next, and vet them more thoroughly.
{F6244828}
{F6244830}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258, T11415
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20220
Summary:
Ref T13259. In some configurations, making a request to ourselves may return a VPN/Auth response from some LB/appliance layer.
If this response begins or ends with whitespace, we currently detect it as "extra whitespace" instead of "bad response".
Instead, require that the response be nearly correct (valid JSON with some extra whitespace, instead of literally anything with some extra whitespace) to hit this specialized check. If we don't hit the specialized case, use the generic "mangled" response error, which prints the actual body so you can figure out that it's just your LB/auth thing doing what it's supposed to do.
Test Plan:
- Rigged responses to add extra whitespace, got "Extra Whitespace" (same as before).
- Rigged responses to add extra non-whitespace, got "Mangled Junk" (same as before).
- Rigged responses to add extra whitespace and extra non-whitespace, got "Mangled Junk" with a sample of the document body instead of "Extra Whitespace" (improvement).
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13259
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20235
Summary: See PHI1112. See T784. Although some more general/flexible solution is arriving eventually, adding this rule seems reasonable for now, since it's not a big deal if we remove it later to replace this with some fancier system.
Test Plan: Created a diff with the official Go generated marker, saw the changeset marked as generated.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20237
Summary:
Ref T13259. If we miss the separate CSRF step in Duo and proceed directly to prompting, we may fail to build a response which turns into a real control and fatal on `null->setLabel()`.
Instead, let MFA providers customize their "bare prompt dialog" response, then make Duo use the same "you have an outstanding request" response for the CSRF and no-CSRF workflows.
Test Plan: Hit Duo auth on a non-CSRF workflow (e.g., edit an MFA provider with Duo enabled). Previously: `setLabel()` fatal. After patch: smooth sailing.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13259
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20234
Summary:
See PHI1063. See PHI1114. Ref T13253. Currently, you can't `bin/worker execute` an archived task and can't `bin/worker retry` a successful task.
Although it's good not to do these things by default (particularly, retrying a successful task will double its effects), there are plenty of cases where you want to re-run something for testing/development/debugging and don't care that the effect will repeat (you're in a dev environment, the effect doesn't matter, etc).
Test Plan: Ran `bin/worker execute/retry` against archived/successful tasks. Got prompted to add more flags, then got re-execution.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13253
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20246
Summary:
Ref T13121. When you connect to a host with SSH, don't already know the host key, and don't have strict host key checking, it prints "Permanently adding host X to known hosts". This is super un-useful.
In a perfect world, we'd probably always have strict host key checking, but this is a significant barrier to configuration/setup and I think not hugely important (MITM attacks against SSH hosts are hard/rare and probably not hugely valuable). I'd imagine a more realistic long term approach is likely optional host key checking.
For now, try using `LogLevel=ERROR` instead of `LogLevel=quiet` to suppress this error. This should be strictly better (since at least some messages we want to see are ERROR or better), although it may not be perfect (there may be other INFO messages we would still like to see).
Test Plan:
- Ran `ssh -o LogLevel=... -o 'StrictHostKeyChecking=no' -o 'UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null'` with bad credentials, for "ERROR", "quiet", and default ("INFO") log levels.
- With `INFO`, got a warning about adding the key, then an error about bad credentials (bad: don't want the key warning).
- With `quiet`, got nothing (bad: we want the credential error).
- With `ERROR`, got no warning but did get an error (good!).
Not sure this always gives us exactly what we want, but it seems like an improvement over "quiet".
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13121
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20240
Summary:
Fixes T13260. "QUERY_STRING" and "REQUEST_URI" are similar for our purposes here, but our nginx documentation tells you to pass "QUERY_STRING" and doesn't tell you to pass "REQUEST_URI". We also use "QUERY_STRING" in a couple of other places already, and already have a setup check for it.
Use "QUERY_STRING" instead of "REQUEST_URI".
Test Plan: Visited `/oauth/google/?a=b`, got redirected with parameters preserved.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Maniphest Tasks: T13260
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20227
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/unhandled-exception-muting-completed-bulk-jobs/2449>. Bulk Jobs have an "edge" table but currently do not support edge transactions. Add support.
This stops "Mute Notifications" from fataling.
The action probably doesn't do what the reporting user expects (it stops edits to the job object from sending notifications; it does not stop the edits the job performs from sending notifications) but I think this change puts us in a better place no matter what, even if we eventually clarify or remove this behavior.
Test Plan: Clicked "Mute Notifications" on a bulk job, got an effect instead of a fatal.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20226
Summary:
See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/traceback-rendering-task-query-in-dashboard/2450/>.
It looks like this blames to D19126, which added some more complex constraint logic but overlooked "range" constraints, which are handled separately.
Test Plan:
- Added a custom "date" field to Maniphest with `"search": true`.
- Executed a range query against the field.
Then:
- Before: Warnings about undefined indexes in the log.
- After: No such warnings.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: jbrownEP
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20225
Summary:
See PHI1059. If you close a task, we apply an "alice closed a subtask: X" transaction to its parents.
This transaction is purely informative, but currently requires `CAN_EDIT` permission after T13186. However, we'd prefer to post this transaction anyway, even if: the parent is locked; or the parent is not editable by the acting user.
Replace the implicit `CAN_EDIT` requirement with no requirement.
(This transaction is only applied internally (by closing a subtask) and can't be applied via the API or any other channel, so this doesn't let attackers spam a bunch of bogus subtask closures all over the place or anything.)
Test Plan:
- Created a parent task A with subtask B.
- Put task A into an "Edits Locked" status.
- As a user other than the owner of A, closed B.
Then:
- Before: Policy exception when trying to apply the "alice closed a subtask: B" transaction to A.
- After: B closed, A got a transaction despite being locked.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20223
Summary:
Depends on D20218. Ref T13258. It's somewhat cumbersome to get from build plans to related builds but this is a reasonable thing to want to do, so make it a little easier.
Also clean up / standardize / hint a few things a little better.
Test Plan: {F6244116}
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20219
Summary: Depends on D20217. Ref T13258. Mostly for completeness. You can't edit build steps so this may not be terribly useful, but you can do bulk policy edits or whatever?
Test Plan: Edited a build plan via API.
Reviewers: amckinley
Reviewed By: amckinley
Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam
Maniphest Tasks: T13258
Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20218